By Matthew
Klein | Monday, April 20
Oil spill. Stock markets
were down across the board today, with particularly large losses among
companies most vulnerable to coronavirus including retailers, casinos, and real
estate. By contrast, companies that traders think will thrive in the age of a
contagious disease, such as Shopify (payments tech for online retailers) and Flir
Systems (which
makes thermal imaging cameras that can potentially detect fevers) are doing
great. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 2.44% on the day, with only 2 of the 30
components (IBM and Cisco
Systems) rising on the day.
Consistent
with the risk-off mood, interest rates edged lower and the dollar edged higher.
The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note hit 0.625% today, which is almost
back to the all-time low of 0.501% reached on March 9.
But the really
exciting news was that the price of a barrel of West
Texas Intermediate crude oil went negative today, dropping from
$18.27 to -$37.63. That may seem strange, but the explanation is simple: today
was the last chance traders had to sell the May 2020 WTI futures contract and
avoid taking delivery of oil that has no place to go. There isn’t enough
storage capacity for crude right now, and if you can’t store a toxic and
dangerous chemical, it’s worth paying a lot of money not to have to worry about
it. Prices simply reflect this basic reality.
Planes are
grounded, cars are staying off the road, and industry is grinding to a halt.
Refinery output has collapsed even as oil drillers keep pumping the black stuff
out of the ground, which means the unprocessed crude has been piling up in tank
farms across the country. According to the U.S.
Energy Information Administration, stocks of
crude oil held in tank farms in Cushing,
Oklahoma rose by 42% between March 20 and April 10.
As of April
10, the latest date for which we have data, tank farms in Cushing were 69%
full, up from just 49% full on March 20. Cushing is the main hub for trading
WTI and it’s safe to assume the situation has gotten worse since then. If
nobody wants to refine oil now, and if you can’t store crude for when people
want it later, the fair value of any additional crude you pump out of the
ground has to be less than zero.
Nobody thinks
negative oil prices are a permanent condition. The futures price of June WTI is
$20.43 a barrel, while the price for July WTI is $26.28. Oil demand is much
lower now than it was a couple of months ago, but it isn’t zero. If enough
producers shut down, even temporarily, new oil supply will be too low to meet
demand and the crude in the tank farms will get burned up, freeing up space for
future storage.
More importantly, most
people think oil demand will eventually recover once the virus is under
control. Brent crude, which is the main oil benchmark outside
the U.S., is currently trading at $25.57, because the balance between supply,
demand, and storage is so different in Europe and Asia.
No comments:
Post a Comment