Invesco DB Oil Fund (NYSEARCA:DBO – Get Free Report) saw a significant decline in short interest in February. As of February 27th, there was short interest totaling 13,511 shares, a decline of 31.0% from the February 12th total of 19,591 shares. Currently, 0.1% of the shares of the stock are short sold. Based on an average daily trading volume, of 683,957 shares, the short-interest ratio is currently 0.0 days. Based on an average daily trading volume, of 683,957 shares, the short-interest ratio is currently 0.0 days. Currently, 0.1% of the shares of the stock are short sold.
Institutional Investors Weigh In On Invesco DB Oil Fund
Hedge funds have recently bought and sold shares of the business. Mather Group LLC. purchased a new position in shares of Invesco DB Oil Fund in the 3rd quarter worth $28,000. International Assets Investment Management LLC purchased a new stake in shares of Invesco DB Oil Fund during the 4th quarter valued at about $33,000. Quent Capital LLC bought a new position in shares of Invesco DB Oil Fund in the 3rd quarter valued at about $43,000. McIlrath & Eck LLC bought a new position in shares of Invesco DB Oil Fund in the 3rd quarter valued at about $43,000. Finally, AE Wealth Management LLC purchased a new position in Invesco DB Oil Fund in the third quarter worth about $70,000.
Invesco DB Oil Fund Stock Down 0.0%
NYSEARCA DBO traded down $0.01 during trading on Friday, hitting $20.55. 2,109,027 shares of the stock traded hands, compared to its average volume of 1,341,622. Invesco DB Oil Fund has a 12-month low of $11.59 and a 12-month high of $20.68. The firm has a 50-day simple moving average of $14.26 and a 200-day simple moving average of $13.45. The company has a market capitalization of $341.13 million, a P/E ratio of 2.38 and a beta of 0.43.
Key Headlines Impacting Invesco DB Oil Fund
- Positive Sentiment: Geopolitical escalation — U.S. strikes and closure risks around the Strait of Hormuz have pushed oil toward new highs, lifting demand for oil exposure via ETFs like DBO. Natural Gas, WTI Oil, Brent Oil Forecasts – Oil Tests New Highs As U.S. Intensifies Strikes Against Iran
- Positive Sentiment: Ongoing war-driven volatility — multiple market notes report crude remains highly sensitive to Middle East headlines, supporting short-term rallies in oil products and DBO flows. Crude Oil Price Analysis – Crude Oil Continues to React to War
- Positive Sentiment: IEA warning on supply disruption — the International Energy Agency called the current disruption the largest ever, underpinning higher long‑dated oil expectations (beneficial to DBO). World faces largest-ever oil supply disruption on Middle East war, IEA says
- Positive Sentiment: Analyst revisions — Goldman Sachs raised its longer‑term Brent/WTI forecasts citing prolonged Hormuz disruption, which supports higher oil price assumptions embedded in oil ETFs. Goldman Sachs raises Q4 Brent, WTI crude price forecast amid longer Hormuz disruption
- Neutral Sentiment: Macro and FX cross‑currents — a stronger US dollar and higher Treasury yields (safe‑haven flows) are complicating the oil picture; dollar strength can cap commodity gains and add volatility for DBO. US Dollar Forecast: DXY Breaks Higher as Oil Surge and Iran Tensions Boost Demand
- Neutral Sentiment: Market positioning & risk sentiment — equity futures swing as investors digest PCE/inflation data and oil headlines; DBO may see flow changes tied to risk-off moves rather than fundamentals. $100 oil, PCE data, MLB valuations and more in Morning Squawk
- Negative Sentiment: Supply relief measures — the U.S. issued a 30‑day license to let countries buy Russian oil stranded at sea and announced SPR releases, which eased a portion of immediate supply concerns and pressured oil prices (a headwind for DBO). Oil drops after US issues license for countries to buy Russian oil stranded at sea for 30 days
- Negative Sentiment: Massive emergency releases — the IEA and U.S. announced record SPR actions (400m global + 172m US barrels reported) to try to calm markets; such releases can cap or reverse short‑term oil upside and reduce DBO gains. US to release 172 million barrels of oil from strategic petroleum reserve
Invesco DB Oil Fund Company Profile
PowerShares DB Oil Fund (the Fund) is a separate series of PowerShares DB Multi-Sector Commodity Trust (the Trust). The Fund is a based on the DBIQ Optimum Yield Crude Oil Index Excess Return (the Index). The Fund seeks to track the changes, whether positive or negative, in the level of the DBIQ Optimum Yield Crude Oil Index Excess Return (the Index) over time, plus the excess, if any, of the Fund’s interest income from its holdings of United States Treasury Obligations and other high credit quality short-term fixed income securities over the expenses of the Fund.
Recommended Stories
- Five stocks we like better than Invesco DB Oil Fund
- A personal warning from Martin Weiss (Please read)
- How JPMorgan’s $8,000 Gold Call Will Leave Most Retirement Accounts Behind
- Elon Musk: This Could Turn $100 into $100,000
- ~$1.5T SpaceX IPO: Pre-IPO Opportunity
- Gilder: Don’t Buy AI Stocks, Do This Instead
Receive News & Ratings for Invesco DB Oil Fund Daily - Enter your email address below to receive a concise daily summary of the latest news and analysts' ratings for Invesco DB Oil Fund and related companies with MarketBeat.com's FREE daily email newsletter.
