Should The EIA Raise Its Oil Data Tracking Game To 21st Century Standards?

 | Nov 08, 2019 14:21

A week ago, I wrote in defense of the U.S. oil supply-demand data put out by the Energy Information Administration each Wednesday.

I argued specifically about the production estimate in the EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report. Although that number was officially guesswork, it was published by the custodian of the world’s most transparent and researched data on oil production and storage. With no competing or authoritative data of its kind, the market had to accept it as the truth, I said.

To buttress my argument, I leaned on a study made by Oil & Gas Investments’ Keith Schaefer. He concluded that the weekly production estimate was almost always validated by the EIA’s Petroleum Supply Monthly report. To verify that, I did my own math and found a perfect match between the July monthly report and the production estimates averaged that month by the EIA. Case closed, I said.

That was before another analysis on the matter that came forth this week from Price Futures Group’s Phil Flynn.

Before we go further, it must be noted that Flynn is an analyst with a bullish bias towards oil prices, who has suggested on numerous occasions that the EIA’s methodology in calculating its weekly production is suspect at best.

After the EIA report for the week ended Oct. 18 ran the same record high of 12.6 million barrels of production per day for the third running week—it still hasn’t changed that for a fifth running week now—Flynn wondered where the agency was getting its numbers. The argument he made then was simple: the U.S. oil rig count was collapsing dramatically, reaching April 2017 lows, yet the EIA was publishing record high production estimates.

'Ignorant? Or Having An Agenda?'/h3

This week, Flynn’s argument was more explosive: He wasn’t just questioning the EIA’s production estimate but was also taking aim at its crude inventory balance—the holy grail of the Weekly Petroleum Status Report.

Flynn asks the EIA or anyone who believes in its numbers: “Are you ignorant or do you have an agenda?”