-- 截至5月1日當週,包括戰略石油儲備在內的美國原油庫存減少了750萬桶,此前一周減少了1,340萬桶。 剔除戰略石油儲備後,商業原油庫存減少了230萬桶,此前一周減少了620萬桶,而彭博社截至美國東部時間上午7:35匯總的調查顯示,市場預期庫存將減少340萬桶。 戰略石油儲備庫存本週減少了520萬桶,前一周減少了710萬桶。 整體原油庫存較前一周下降0.9%,但仍比去年同期高出1.5%。目前原油庫存比五年同期平均高出約1%。 汽油庫存減少250萬桶,低於預期的260萬桶降幅。汽油庫存較前一周下降1.1%,較去年同期下降2.6%。 餾分油庫存本週減少130萬桶,低於預期的230萬桶下降。餾分油庫存較前一周下降1.2%,較去年同期下降4.1%。 煉油廠開工率為90.1%,高於前一週的89.6%。
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Research Alert: CFRA Maintains Hold Opinion On Lucid Group Inc.
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Research Alert: CFRA Maintains Sell Opinion On Shares Of Celanese Corporation
CFRA, an independent research provider, has providedwith the following research alert. Analysts at CFRA have summarized their opinion as follows:After reviewing Q1 earnings, we raise our 12-month target price by $2 to $43 on a forward P/E of 7.4x our 2027 EPS view of $5.78, a discount to the three-year average of 10.4x justified by CE's high debt levels and subdued demand. We raise our 2026 EPS view by $1.35 to $6.14 and decrease 2027's by $0.09 to 5.78. Our sales estimates are $9.7 billion for 2026 and $10.1 billion for 2027. On the positive side, CE's Acetyl Chain's Q2 2026 Adjusted EBIT guidance of $300M-$325M was solid, led by higher expected volumes and prices. However, the acetate tow business remains weak and feedstock costs have risen sharply. Meanwhile, Engineered Materials' Q2 2026 Adjusted EBIT guidance of $190M-$210M was more conservative due to inventory reductions and additional costs from the POM facility turnaround. Overall, we believe CE's 48% year-to-date stock gain is excessive and expect earnings to decline once again in 2027 as the temporary margin boost from the Middle East conflict fades.
Canada's Provincial Budgets in Pain From Healthcare Costs, Says CIBC
The COVID-19 pandemic may be distant in the rearview mirror, but healthcare costs in Canada are continuing to have an outsized impact on provincial finances, said CIBC.At just over 40% of total expenses in aggregate, healthcare is always the single biggest line item, writes the bank in a note to clients. However, its recent impact has been even greater than that, as it has contributed more than half of the increases in spending seen in the past five years.In addition, these cost increases haven't always been easy to predict, with healthcare also contributing more than 50% of recent spending overshoots relative to initial budget estimates, points out CIBC.Increased health spending needs have often been blamed on inflation, including pay increases for medical staff and population growth. While concerns about inflationary pressures are resurfacing again due to the Middle East conflict, the sharp deceleration in population growth should, in theory, ease the strain on healthcare costs.Unfortunately, however, there is another and potentially larger factor driving costs upwards, one that will get worse before it gets better. That's the increase in healthcare costs that comes from an aging population, as per capita health spending rises exponentially for age brackets above 65, states the bank.If the population continues to age as expected, then healthcare costs could continue to rise more than provinces, on aggregate, are currently projecting, according to CIBC.