Welcome
Settings
Policy
COOKIES
We use cookies to give you the best online experience. Strictly necessary cookies are on by default. Additional cookies are off by default. You can choose which of these additional cookies to allow by enabling them on our settings tab.
All the data we collect is anonymous, in accordance with the GDPR.
Your cookie preferences will be stored for one year, but you can modify your preferences at any time by clicking on ‘Cookies’ in our footer.
Analytics
These cookies track what pages are visited on our website, to help us monitor and improve our content.
Cookies
We use cookies from:
- Google Analytics
- Zoom Info
Media
We embed videos and other media hosted by third parties. Cookies help us keep track of what videos are being watched, and allow those third parties to serve you related content on their own sites. The videos will still work if you do not accept cookies.
Cookies
We use cookies from:
- YouTube
- Vimeo
Other
Miscellaneous cookies – currently none from third parties.
Cookies
xxx
Essential
Cookies
Cookie policy
Lifting
Lifting refers to the act of executing a trade by accepting the best available offer price in the market. In trading terminology, a buyer “lifts the offer” to immediately acquire an asset at the quoted ask price.
In physical oil markets, lifting can also mean taking delivery of a cargo or volume under a supply contract. Traders may choose whether and when to lift crude based on pricing formulas, logistics constraints, and market conditions.
In derivatives trading, lifting signals aggressive buying interest and often occurs during bullish momentum or when traders need urgent execution. Repeated lifting can move prices higher by consuming available liquidity.
The term highlights the distinction between passive liquidity provision and active liquidity consumption, an important concept in understanding price formation and market impact.