USGC Prices Mixed in May, Gasoline Rises, Distillates Fall
6/01 4:34 PM
USGC Prices Mixed in May, Gasoline Rises, Distillates Fall Miguel E. Andujar DTN Refined Fuels Market Reporter DAVENPORT, FL (DTN) -- U.S. Gulf Coast refined product prices posted mixed performance in May, with gasoline strengthening on seasonal demand, while distillates weakened as rising utilization boosted supply. Ongoing uncertainty surrounding also weighed on distillate bearish sentiment, limiting upside despite broader geopolitical risk. Gasoline prices in the region moved higher during May, diverging from diesel and jet fuel markets despite tightening product inventories. CBOB gasoline spot prices rose 23.50cts gallon to an average of $3.3118 gallon in May, 70.19% higher than $1.9459 gallon reported in the same period last year. Gasoline inventories in the region fluctuated through May, posting one weekly build, two consecutive draws, and a final increase. According to the latest Energy Information Administration (EIA) inventory report, gasoline inventories stood at 81.1 million bbl in the week ended May 22, below the 84.9 million bbl reported during the same period last year. ULSD spot prices remained under pressure and traded at an average of $3.8320 gallon in May, down 3.37cts from April, on weak demand, and 89.77% above $2.0193 gallon a year earlier. Distillate fuel oil inventories fell by 1.3 million bbl to 40.3 million bbl in the week ended May 22 and were below 43.8 million bbl reported during the same week last year, EIA data showed. Despite the decline, inventories remained above 38 million bbl -- the lowest level since the week ended March 17, 2023 -- recorded two weeks prior. USGC jet fuel traded at an average of $3.6013 gallon in May, down 44.63cts from April and 86.05% higher than $1.9357 gallon reported during the same period last year. The latest EIA inventory report showed jet fuel inventories increased by 1 million bbl to 15.4 million bbl in the week ended May 22 and were above the 13.4 million bbl reported during the same week last year. Gulf Coast refiners steadily increased operating rates throughout May, with refinery utilization rising from 95.9% at the beginning of the month to 98% in the latest reporting week. Crude oil inputs reached 9.595 million bpd as refiners ramped up production ahead of peak summer fuel demand. U.S. Gulf prices remained well above pre-war levels. From the start of the Iran war on February 28 to May 29, Gulf Coast gasoline spot prices climbed 43%, diesel prices rose 41% and jet fuel increased 33%, according to DTN data. The elevated price structure reflected persistent geopolitical risk premiums in global energy markets and robust international demand for Gulf Coast barrels. Heightened concerns over potential disruptions to trade flows through the Strait of Hormuz increased the importance of alternative supply sources, supporting export demand from Europe and Asia. Looking ahead to June, Gulf Coast refined product prices could remain under pressure from strong refinery production and seasonally rising fuel output. However, gasoline and distillate inventories remain below year-ago levels, while strong export demand and refinery utilization rates already near maximum operating rates could limit the market's ability to absorb unexpected supply disruptions. Any refinery outage, hurricane-related disruption or escalation of geopolitical tensions could quickly tighten balances and support prices despite the recent decline. (c) Copyright 2026 DTN, LLC. All rights reserved.
 
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