Oil Futures Fall Below Zero for 1st Time in History

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Oil Futures Fall Below Zero for 1st Time in History

Prices drop as low as minus $40 per barrel as traders sell off oil futures in frenzy due to lack of oil storage space

PETR SVAB

U.S. oil prices plunged to unprecedented negative numbers on April 20 as a lack of storage space and weak demand forced oil producers and traders into the bizarre situation of paying anybody willing to take the oil.

The price of West Texas Intermediate (WTI), the leading U. S. oil price index, to be delivered in May dropped at one point to about negative $40 a barrel, before somewhat rebounding to negative $37.63.

The negative price was caused by traders who realized that there’s going to be a severe lack of capacity to store the oil about to be pumped out in the coming weeks. The market quickly reached a point where storage became more valuable than the oil itself.

Storage capacity has been scarce for weeks while demand has dramatically slowed due to efforts to mitigate the global spread of the CCP virus.

Contracts to buy oil produced in May need to be closed by April 21 on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME). Traders who speculate on oil prices close such contracts with no intention of obtaining the physical oil. Instead, they plan to sell the contracts later, hopefully at a higher price. As the deadline approached, it became clear how scarce were buyers who can actually take deliveries of the oil. Speculators stuck with the contracts thus went into a frenzy to unload them.

The PRICE Futures Group

Phil Flynn, Senior Analyst,

The crude oil tanker Chemtrans Cancale is seen anchored offshore as it waits to dock at Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on April 20, 2020.

“This is a reminder that you never say never in oil,” said Phil Flynn, senior analyst at The PRICE Futures Group. “Those that said that WTI would never trade negative were proven wrong from the coronavirus.”

It’s the “crazy times,” he said in an email, where there’s “more oil to deliver than anyone wants.”

So far, the phenomenon seems temporary. For now, contracts for oil produced in June remain positive, at around $20 a barrel.

Industry in Distress

The rock-bottom oil prices threaten to wipe out a major part of the U.S. oil industry. WTI has been below $20 for nearly a week now, while producers need it on average above $30 to at least cover operating expenses for existing wells.

Some producers can pump at a price as low as $2 to $5 a barrel. Most, however, need much more. Many can’t even turn a profit below $ 40, according to a survey by the Federal Reserve bank of Dallas.

To open a new well, oilers on average need the WTI to be about $50.

Pandemic Effect

The CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, also called novel coronavirus, broke out in the central Chinese city of Wuhan around November 2019, before spreading across China and the world.

By April 20, there have been over 2.47 million confirmed cases and nearly 170,000 deaths, with many more likely in countries with unreliable data.

The pandemic prompted governments to impose stay-at-home orders and business shutdowns that forced millions into unemployment. With the economic slowdown, demand for oil plummeted, leaving oilers scrambling to cut costs and production.

“Because producers have been lagging in their production cuts, we’re seeing an overwhelming amount of crude oil looking for a place to go around the world,” said Andy Lipow of Lipow Oil Associates.

Crude stockpiles at the oil trading hub in Cushing, Oklahoma, rose 9 percent in the week to April 17, totaling around 61 million barrels, market analysts said, citing an April 20 report from Genscape.

“It’s clear that Cushing is going to fill, and it will stay full for the next several months,” Lipow said.

Price War

The glut has been exacerbated by a price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia that started after Russia walked away from talks on production cuts with the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) in early March. Both countries then escalated production, flooding the already shrinking market.

Moscow, Riyadh, and other major oil producers have since agreed to cut production by 9.7 million barrels a day, but those cuts don’t begin until May. Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia is ramping up deliveries of oil, including big shipments to the United States.

Worldwide oil consumption is roughly 100 million barrels a day, and supply generally stays in line with that. But consumption is down about 30 percent globally, and the cuts so far have been much less.

Filing the Reserve

To prop up the industry, President Donald Trump has ordered the filing of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), which can hold about 700 million barrels, but only stored some 635 million in January.

Yet, the $3 billion earmarked for filling the SPR was cut from the coronavirus stimulus package by Democrat legislators, who criticized it as a “big oil” bailout.

On April 14, the Energy Department announced contracts with nine oil companies to store oil for them in the SPR.

The contracts under negotiation are for some 23 million barrels that should be delivered to the SPR in May and June, “with possible early deliveries in April,” the department said in a release.

“Awardees can schedule the return of their oil through March 2021, minus a small amount of oil to cover the SPR’s cost of storage.”