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This is another sign of $100/bbl in the near future

Posted: Thu Jul 01, 2021 6:36 pm
by dan_s
By Alex Longley for Bloomberg

The U.S. oil futures curve is pointing to a tightness the market hasn’t seen in years, sparking concerns of the potential for sharp inventory drawdowns.

The three nearest so-called timespreads on the West Texas Intermediate futures curve hit $1 a barrel or more on Thursday. That’s an indicator that the market is growing increasingly worried about supply tightness, particularly at the key storage hub of Cushing, Oklahoma, where U.S. crude futures are priced.

WTI for immediate delivery is more than $3 higher than delivery for four months ahead, the widest spread since 2018. The last time the spreads were this strong, inventories at the key U.S. hub were just slipping below 25 million barrels, about 15 million below their current level. The bullishness has steadily rippled along the forward curve, increasing market angst in recent days.

The U.S. remains the hottest corner of the oil market, as a steadily reopening economy is pushing refiners to ramp up their crude processing. In the Midwest region, where Cushing is located, refiners were operating at about 98% of capacity last week, while the nationwide figure was about 93%. All the while, the U.S. continues to export bumper levels of crude, also helping drain domestic inventories and producers are keeping a lid on production. Stockpiles have been falling at the fastest rate in decades, something that shows little sign of abating if the current export trend continues.

The potential for limited action by OPEC+ on Thursday (to bring more oil supply to a tight global market) is also compounding expectations of supply tightness in the coming months. The group is expected to add 400,000 barrels a day to the market in August, but that’s a fraction of it’s own estimates for the global market deficit over the period. < MY TAKE: OPEC may not have all of the production capacity that they have been telling the world they have. Just maybe, the fact that Aramco is public company may have something to do overstating their ability to meet customers' demands.)

Options markets were also seen to be helping the move higher, with about 7,000 bullish contracts held on each of the first three single-month spreads that would profit a buyer when prices reach $1. While those contracts are unlikely to have been the sole cause of the move higher, the sellers of such options are forced to buy additional futures as they become more valuable.

Re: This is another sign of $100/bbl in the near future

Posted: Thu Jul 01, 2021 6:44 pm
by dan_s
Cushing has over 60 million barrels of oil storage capacity. It is extremely important for the U.S. economy for adequate crude oil to be available to our refineries. If Cushing inventories fall below 25 million barrels it would be "dangerously tight". BTW the Keystone XL pipeline was being built to insure we had a steady supply of oil from our friends in Canada. The Biden Team needs to start putting America first.

More from Bloomberg:
Inventory levels at the massive complex, which houses crude oil produced across West Texas, the Midwest and western Canada, arguably has more sway over oil prices than anywhere else in world. With U.S. shale production still 15% off of its pre-pandemic peak and imports from Canada running low there is a growing consensus among trading house and Big Oil executives that prices are set to surge as supplies tighten.

“The U.S. domestic market was actually caught by significant out-performance of domestic refinery runs compared to the view most market participants had just 2-3 months ago,” said Rystad Energy AS analyst Artem Abramov. There has also been some lag on imports, he said.

Rystad sees Cushing stockpiles falling to around 21 million to 23 million barrels by the end of summer. If inventories fall to 21 million it would the lowest since 2011. < U.S. demand for oil is higher today than it was in 2011.

It’s a stark reversal from a year ago when a market price crash devastated the oil industry as demand slid from pandemic-fueled restrictions. It forced traders to stuff unwanted crude into storage globally until consumption improved, shifting the market to a steep contango where oil for immediate delivery trades at a discount to forward supply.

At the heart of the decline is a lack of a type of oil called Domestic Sweet or DSW that is produced by blending a cocktail of crudes, including supplies from the Permian and the Midwest, according to market participants. Output recovery in the Midwest, where Cushing tanks sit, has been the slowest among all producing regions.

“The lack of available DSW is undoubtedly tightening WTI–spec balances at the hub,” according to a note from consultants Energy Aspects. This and strong exit flows could push Cushing stocks in August and September to around 27 million barrels and 24 million barrels, respectively, they said.

Three basins that may be contributing to tightening DSW blendstock are the Niobrara, Eagle Ford and Bakken, said Elisabeth Murphy, ESAI Energy LLC upstream analyst for North America.