Warning to Oil Bears: A Squeeze Could Shake Markets and Catch Shorts Off Guard—Here’s What Investors Must Know Now

Warning to Oil Bears: A Squeeze Could Shake Markets and Catch Shorts Off Guard—Here’s What Investors Must Know Now

Isn’t it wild how the sentiment on crude oil can flip a market? Bart Melek at TD Securities points out something that’s got me raising an eyebrow—money managers are deeply short on crude, betting against the grain while missing some crucial signals. They’re bracing for a demand drop in China and an oil glut that, frankly, may not be on the horizon. Meanwhile, with deficits looming larger as summer heats up and Brent breaking key resistance levels, there’s this electric sense that a short-covering rally is about to surge faster than anyone anticipated. Could it be that the biggest shorts are sitting on the wrong side of this trade, potentially facing a $10–15 per barrel shock if supply crises continue? It’s almost like watching a high-stakes poker game where everyone’s bluffing but no one’s calling… yet. Intrigued? LEARN MORE.

Bart Melek at TD Securities argues that money managers are heavily short crude based on what he views as misread market conditions, including pessimism on China demand and expectations of an oil glut. With deficits set to persist and deepen through summer and Brent breaking key resistance, the bank expects positioning to shift as short covering risks grow.

Managed money shorts at extremes

“We have long argued that ongoing inventory erosion later this summer would trigger a short-covering rally.”

“That process now appears to be unfolding more rapidly than expected.”

“We see $10–15/ bbl of additional upside in the not-too-distant future should the crisis continue to threaten oil supplies and force money managers to cover their short positions.”

“Based on what we view as misplaced interpretations of market conditions, including expectations that China will have a cycle of demand destruction, persistently depressed import levels, the belief that seaborne inventories are not falling at a record pace, and forecasts for an “oil glut” in the coming months, money managers are heavily short.”

“Short exposure in Brent is at levels not seen since late 2025, when the market was concerned about a three million b/d surplus.”

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor. Know more.)

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