Oil traders expect stocks to start falling this month

LONDON (Reuters) – Crude traders are anticipating a substantial reduction in global stocks over the next year as consumption recovers after the coronavirus epidemic and output cuts by OPEC+ and shale producers whittle away excess inventories.

Brent calendar spreads have tightened progressively since the middle of April as the major economies have begun to re-open after locking down in March and oil producers have started to cut output.

Brent futures’ six-month calendar spread has shrunk to a contango of less than $2 per barrel from a recent high of $12-$14 between late March and late April.

In the physical market, the five-week spread for dated Brent has flipped into a small backwardation of 15 cents per barrel from a contango of more than $6.

Brent spreads have historically been a good proxy for the global production-consumption balance as well as inventories in the United States.

Since the early 1990s, contango has corresponded with periods when the market was oversupplied and stocks have been rising year-on-year, while backwardation has correlated with falling stocks.

The recent shift from a wide contango towards a flat structure and even into backwardation for nearby dates therefore indicates stocks are expected to start falling soon, with the first draws in June or July.

Traders’ expectations expressed via the Brent spreads are consistent with the gradual drawdown in global oil stocks predicted by the major statistical agencies.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration forecasts U.S. crude inventories will fall by 230,000 barrels per day (bpd) in the second half of the year after increasing by more than 800,000 bpd in the first six months.

The agency predicts the U.S. market will move into a supply deficit of 200,000 bpd as early as July having been in surplus by 1.8 million bpd in April (“Short-Term Energy Outlook”, EIA, June 9).

U.S. commercial crude inventories (including stocks temporarily stored in the strategic petroleum reserve) are predicted to fall from 580 million barrels at end-June to 540 million by end-2020 and 510 million by end-2021.

OECD stocks of crude and products are forecast to decline almost 1.2 million bpd in the second half of 2020 and 0.8 million bpd in 2021, reversing an increase of 5.2 million bpd between March and May this year.

Globally, EIA forecasts inventories will fall by an average of 3.0 million bpd for the second half of 2020 after rising by at an average of 9.4 million bpd between January and May.

There is now a dominant view that the market will rebalance over the next 18 months, provided OPEC+ maintains its commitment to reduced production, U.S. shale output does not surge again, and there is no second wave of coronavirus.

(John Kemp is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed are his own)

Author: John Kemp, Editor: Elaine Hardcastle, Reuters, June 10, 2020

New tests into degassing barges in North Sea Port successful

Testing of vapour processing installations began in Vlissingen, North Sea Port on Thursday 28 May. The aim is to enable inland tankers to process residual vapours safely and in a controlled manner with a newly developed installation. The initial tests were successful, North Sea Port says in a press release.

The industry has already achieved a significant reduction in emissions in recent years by introducing ’dedicated and compatible’ sailing, eliminating the need for degassing. However, this is not in itself sufficient to avoid degassing completely. In 2020, the prohibitions will therefore be gradually extended to a national ban that will reduce emissions of these harmful substances by 98%.

Degassing a vessel while sailing along inland waterways is bad for air quality, for the health of local residents and for people who work with these substances. Since 2015, the provinces of Zeeland, Noord-Brabant, Zuid-Holland, Utrecht, Noord-Holland, Gelderland and Flevoland have already introduced bans on the degassing of benzene and substances containing benzene.

The aim of the tests is to achieve cleaner air along the waterways with the help of innovative technologies. The tests at North Sea Port went well. The functioning of the equipment was monitored throughout the testing procedure.

These tests are the first of a series with different types of installations being rolled out in the ports of North Sea Port, Rotterdam and Amsterdam. The measurements are being conducted by an independent agency that will determine which installations meet the strictest requirements and where improvements are still needed. The results of the trials will be evaluated by the ‘degassing while sailing taskforce’, which will then advise the responsible Dutch minister on the further construction of the infrastructure.

The test in Zeeland is being supported by Shell Chemicals Europe. The site in Vlissingen has been provided by North Sea Port as part of its aim of achieving a more sustainable port. The province of Zeeland supports the project. Zeeland also currently holds the chairmanship of the national ‘degassing while sailing taskforce’. GreenPoint Maritime Services is supplying the vapour processing installation being used in the tests.

The Dutch Minister of Infrastructure and Water Management, Cora van Nieuwenhuizen, set up a ‘degassing while sailing taskforce’ in 2018 in order to ensure the smooth implementation of the national ban. From this year, the task force has been chaired by Dick van der Velde, a member of the Zeeland provincial executive. The task force includes representatives of central government, the provinces, ports, shippers, hauliers, storage companies and vapour processing firms. In order to facilitate the introduction of the national ban, it is important to build up an infrastructure consisting of innovative installations capable of processing or reusing the vapour cargo residues.

PortNews, June 9, 2020

Independent ARA Oil Product Stocks Hit Three-Week Lows

June 18, 2020 — Total oil products held in independent storage in the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp (ARA) trading hub fell on the week after reaching their highest since at least 2003 a week earlier, according to consultancy Insights Global.

Stocks reached fresh record highs in each of the three previous weeks, supported by contango in the forward curves of the underlying crude futures and Ice gasoil contracts owing to the massive reduction in demand caused by the Covid-19 pandemic and related lockdowns. But stocks fell during the week to yesterday, amid rising demand for oil products within northwest Europe and in export regions.

Gasoline inventories fell. The amount of cargo movements, both on barges and on seagoing tankers, eased after an exceptionally frenetic week across the ARA area a week earlier. Exports to the US remained broadly stable on the week at a high level, but no tankers departed for China. Tankers also departed for Canada, the Mediterranean, Singapore and west Africa. Cargoes arrived from Finland, France and Russia. Congestion in the regional barge market eased, particularly around Amsterdam.

Fuel oil stocks fell heavily in the week to yesterday. Flows of high-sulphur fuel oil to the Middle East for power generation continued, with two Aframax tankers departing for Saudi Arabia during the reporting period. Tankers also departed for the Mediterranean. No fresh fixtures emerged on the arbitrage route to Singapore, and cargoes arrived in the ARA from the UK and Russia.

ARA gasoil stocks rose on the week, reaching fresh ten-month highs. At least one tanker carrying gasoil discharged in the ARA after having waited in the North Sea since 8 May. Steep contango across the product markets prompted the booking of tankers to store volume offshore, but total volumes are easing as end-user demand rises. High inventories in Germany weighed on barge flows from the ARA to destinations up the river Rhine, supporting stock levels downriver. Tankers departed for France and the UK, and arrived from Russia, Saudi Arabia and Singapore.

Jet kerosine inventories fell, and as with gasoil at least one tanker discharged following a period of use as floating storage. Tankers departed for the UK, and local demand rose as European civil aviation begins to restart following the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Naphtha inventories fell. No tankers departed the area, but local demand for the product from gasoline blenders was firm during the reporting period, and several petrochemical end-users bought cargoes. Tankers arrived from Latvia, Russia and the UK.

Reporter: Thomas Warner

Independent ARA Oil Product Stocks Extend Highs

Total oil products held in independent storage in the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp (ARA) trading hub rose on the week, the highest since at least 2003, according to consultancy Insights Global.

Stocks had already been at their highest since at least 2003 the previous week, after inventories of all surveyed products except gasoline had risen in the week to 27 May.

The week on week rise was driven by rising inventories of gasoline, as well as fuel oil and gasoil, while naphtha and jet kerosine inventories dropped lower.

Independently-held gasoline storage in ARA hit a fresh high since at least 2003 this week. Stocks rose as tankers arrived at ARA jetties from Estonia, Russia, France, Spain and the UK. Higher imports into ARA tanks could be a function of higher export demand, as sellers look to accrue supplies to assemble larger cargoes for long-haul voyages across the Atlantic or to Asia-Pacific. Gasoline was exported out of the ARA area to the US and Mexico, as well as the Mediterranean, over the past week. And more long-haul exports could follow in the coming week, with as many as 19 seagoing vessels spotted at jetties in the area, according to Insights Global.

ARA gasoil stocks rose, the highest since October 2019. Weaker inland demand prompted a drop in barge flows up the Rhine, according to Insights Global, while weakening refining margins could also be resulting in rising stocks amid a slowdown in demand. Inflows into the region remain high, with tankers arriving in ARA from Russia, India and the Middle East. No gasoil exports were recorded by Insights Global in the past week.

Fuel oil stocks rose in the week to 3 June, the joint highest on record. But stocks could decrease over the next week as long-haul export shipments materialise. The Torm Mathilde departed from Rotterdam with around 90,000t of fuel oil on 4 June for an onward voyage to Saudi Arabia, according to data from oil analytics firm Vortexa. Renewed Opec and non-Opec production cuts could result in higher flows of high-sulphur fuel oil to the Middle East for power generation as a replacement for crude oil. Suezmax tankers were also said to have been booked to load fuel oil from ARA for onward voyages to Singapore.

Jet kerosine inventories dipped as supplies were delivered to ARA storage from the UAE, while outflows were recorded to the UK. Jet fuel inventories could be decreasing as demand picks up in line with the gradual recovery of the aviation sector.

Naphtha stocks fell. Inland demand from the petrochemical sector remained weak, while stock levels could be decreasing as naphtha is taken out of storage tanks for processing at regional refineries.

Report: Robert Harvey

Independent ARA Oil Product Stocks Hit Fresh Highs

May 28, 2020 — The amount of oil products held in independent storage in the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp (ARA) area rose during the past week to reac the highest level since at least 2003, according to consultancy Insights Global.

Inventories of almost all surveyed products rose on the week, supported by the crude market’s steep contango structure, where prompt prices are at a discount to forward values. The tank utilisation rate in ARA was between 70-75pc, but the 25-30pc not in direct use was unavailable to the market. Available commercial tank space in the area appears very limited until well into 2021.

Gasoline stocks bucked the trend, falling during the past week, driven by a rise in local demand and a week-on-week increase in arbitrage flows to the US and west Africa. Demand for gasoline in the US is rising ahead of the summer driving season. Gasoline cargoes also departed ARA for Puerto Rico, and arrived in the area from France, Italy, Spain and the UK.

Stocks of all other products rose, with naphtha and jet fuel both reaching their highest level since at least 2003. Jet fuel barge movements around the ARA area ticked up from a very low base, but demand from inland destinations along the river Rhine remained virtually non-existant.

Several European airlines have announced plans to increase passenger flights next month as travel restrictions brought in to tackle the Covid-19 pandemic are eased. But a global surplus of jet fuel means that market participants are still looking for floating storage for the product. Tankers carrying jet fuel arrived in the ARA area from the Mideast Gulf, South Korea and from Augusta in Italy during the past week, while one tanker departed the region for the UK.

Naphtha inventories rose on the week. Demand from petrochemical plants along the river Rhine was low, with prices of rival feedstocks becoming more competitive. And high gasoline inventories meant that there was little interest from gasoline blenders either.

Gasoil stocks rose on the week, the highest level since October last year, as traders looked to take advantage of a contango structure in Ice gasoil futures by putting product into storage. Gasoil flows up the Rhine to inland markets reached their highest weekly level since at least 2017 a week earlier, but fell back during the past week as stocks inland also approached storage capacity. Gasoil tankers departed ARA for the UK and west Africa, and arrived from the Mediterranean, Poland, Russia and Saudi Arabia.

Fuel oil stocks rose slightly. Demand in the ARA area for bunker fuels remained stable at a very low level, weighed down by the impact of Covid-19 on commercial shipping. Fuel oil cargoes arrived in ARA from the Black Sea, France, Germany and Russia, and departed for the Mediterranean and Port Said for orders.

Reporter: Thomas Warner

Costly Electric Vehicles Confront a Harsh Coronavirus Reality

For automakers who have invested heavily in a shift to high tech, there’s no turning back.

By Christoph Rauwald and Bruce Einhorn, 27 May 2020 (Bloomberg)

At a factory near Germany’s border with the Czech Republic, Volkswagen AG’s ambitious strategy to become the global leader in electric vehicles is coming up against the reality of manufacturing during a pandemic.

The Zwickau assembly lines, which produce the soon-to-be released ID.3 electric hatchback, are the centerpiece of a plan by the world’s biggest automaker to spend 33 billion euros ($36 billion) by 2024 developing and building EVs. At the site, where an East German automaker built the diminutive Trabant during the Cold War, VW eventually wants to churn out as many as 330,000 cars annually. That would make Zwickau one of Europe’s largest electric-car factories—and help the company overtake Tesla Inc. in selling next-generation vehicles.

But Covid-19 is putting VW’s and other automakers’ electric ambitions at risk. The economic crisis triggered by the pandemic has pushed the auto industry, among others, to near-collapse, emptying showrooms and shutting factories. As job losses mount, big-ticket purchases are firmly out of reach—in the U.S., where Tesla is cutting prices, more than 36 million people have filed for unemployment since mid-March. Also, the plunge in oil prices is making gasoline-powered vehicles more attractive, and some cash-strapped governments are less able to offer subsidies to promote new technologies.

Even before the crisis, automakers had to contend with an extended downturn in China, the world’s biggest auto market, where about half of all passenger EVs are sold. Total auto sales in China declined the past two years amid a slowing economy, escalating trade tensions, and stricter emission regulations. EV sales are forecast to fall to 932,000 this year, down 14% from 2019, according to BloombergNEF. The drop-off is expected to stretch into a third year as China’s leaders have abandoned their traditional practice of setting an annual target for economic growth, citing uncertainties. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg expect just 1.8% GDP growth this year.

Global Passenger Vehicle Sales

The global market contraction raises the prospect of casualties. French finance minister Bruno Le Maire has warned that Renault SA, an early adopter of electric cars with models like the Zoe, could “disappear” without state aid. Even Toyota Motor Corp., a hybrid pioneer when it first introduced the Prius hatchback in 1997, is under pressure. The Japanese manufacturer expects profits to tumble to the lowest level in almost a decade.

Automakers who for years have invested heavily in a shift to a high-tech future—including autonomous vehicles and other alternative energy-based forms of transportation such as hydrogen—now face a grim test. Do their pre-pandemic plans to build and sell electric cars at a profit have any chance of succeeding in a vastly changed economic climate? Even as Covid-19 has obliterated demand, for the car makers most committed to electric, there’s no turning back.

“We all have a historic task to accomplish,” Thomas Ulbrich, who runs Volkswagen’s EV business, said when assembly lines restarted on April 23, “to protect the health of our employees—and at the same time get business back on track responsibly.”

Volkswagen Pushes Ahead

Global EV sales will shrink this year, falling 18% to about 1.7 million units, according to BloombergNEF, although they’re likely to return to growth over the next four years, topping 6.9 million by 2024.

“The general trend toward electric vehicles is set to continue, but the economic conditions of the next two to three years will be tough,” said Marcus Berret, managing director at consultancy Roland Berger.

Volkswagen’s Zwickau facility became the first auto plant in Germany to resume production after a nationwide lockdown started in March. Before restarting, the company crafted a detailed list of about 100 safety measures for employees, requiring them to, among other things, wear masks and protective gear if they can’t adhere to social-distancing rules.

The cautious approach has reduced capacity—50 cars per day initially rolled off the Zwickau assembly line, roughly a third of what the plant manufactured before the coronavirus crisis. (VW said Wednesday that daily output had risen to 150 vehicles, with a plan to reach 225 next month.) Persistent software problems also have plagued development of the ID.3, one of 70 new electric models VW group is looking to bring to market in the coming years.

Still, Ulbrich and VW CEO Herbert Diess over the past three months have reaffirmed Volkswagen’s commitment to electrification. “My new working week starts together with Thomas Ulbrich at the wheel of a Volkswagen ID.3 – our most important project to meet the European CO2-targets in 2020 and 2021,” Diess wrote in a post on LinkedIn in April. “We are fighting hard to keep our timeline for the launches to come.”

Diess has described the ID.3 as “an electric car for the people that will move electric mobility from niche to mainstream.” Pre-Covid, the company had anticipated that 2020 would be the year it would prove its massive investments and years of planning for electric and hybrid models would start to pay off.

A more pressing worry that could hamper VW’s ability to scale up production is its existing inventory of unsold vehicles. The cars need to move to make room for new releases, but sales are down as consumers are tightening their spending. One response has been to offer improved financing in Germany, including optional rate protection should buyers lose their jobs. VW also has adopted new sales strategies first used by its Chinese operations, such as delivering disinfected cars to customer homes for test drives, and expanding online commerce.

Other German automakers are similarly pushing ahead with EV plans. Daimler AG is sticking to a plan to flank an electric SUV with a battery-powered van and a compact later this year. BMW AG plans to introduce the SUV-size iNEXT in 2021 as well as the i4, a sedan seeking to challenge Tesla’s best-selling Model 3.

A potential obstacle for all these companies—apart from still patchy charging infrastructure in many markets—is the availability of batteries. Supply bottlenecks appear inevitable given that the number of electric car projects across the industry outstrip global battery production capacity. And boosting cell manufacturing is a complicated task.

China’s (Weakened) EV Dominance 

For VW and others, the first big test of EVs’ appeal in a Covid-19 world will come in China. Diess has referred to China as “the engine of success for Volkswagen AG.” VW group deliveries returned to growth year-on-year last month in China, while all other major markets declined.

Not long ago, China appeared to be leading the world toward an electric future. As part of President Xi Jinping’s goal to make the country an industrial superpower by 2025, the government implemented policies that would boost sales of EVs and help domestic automakers become globally competitive, not just in electric passenger cars but buses, too.

With the outbreak seemingly under control in much of the country, China is seeing some buyers return to the showrooms, but demand for passenger cars is likely to fall for the third year in a row, putting startups like NIO Inc. at risk and hurting more-established players like Warren Buffett-backed BYD Co., which suffered from a 40% year-on-year vehicle sales decline in the first four months of 2020.

The Chinese auto market may shrink as much as 25% this year, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, which before the pandemic had been expecting a 2% decline. EV sales fell by more than one-third in the second half of 2019.

NIO, the Shanghai-based startup that raised about $1 billion from a New York Stock Exchange initial public offering in 2018 but lost more than 11 billion yuan ($1.5 billion) last year, was thrown a much-needed lifeline when a group of investors, including a local government in China’s Anhui Province, offered 7 billion yuan last month.

Other Chinese manufacturers are counting on support from the government, too, including tax breaks and an extension to 2022 of subsidies, originally scheduled to end this year, to make EVs more affordable.

For now, the government will also look to help makers of internal combustion engine vehicles, at least during the worst of the crisis, said Jing Yang, director of corporate research in Shanghai with Fitch Ratings. But, she said, “over the medium-to-long term, the focus will still be on the EV side.”

America is Tesla Country

Companies can’t count on that same level of support from President Donald Trump in the U.S., where consumers who love their SUVs and pickup trucks have largely steered clear of electric vehicles other than Tesla’s.

The U.S. lags China and Europe in promoting the production and sale of EVs, and that gap may widen now that Americans can buy gas for less than $2 a gallon.

“When you’re digging out of this crisis, you’re not going to try to do that with unprofitable and low-volume products, which are EVs,” said Kevin Tynan, a senior analyst with Bloomberg Intelligence.

Weeks after announcing plans to launch EVs for each of its brands, General Motors Co. delayed the unveiling of the Cadillac Lyriq EV originally planned for April. Then on April 29, the company said it would put off the scheduled May introduction of a new Hummer EV. The models are part of CEO Mary Barra’s strategy to spend $20 billion on electrification and autonomous driving by 2025, to try to close the gap with Tesla.

In another move aimed at winning over Tesla buyers, Ford Motor Co. unveiled its electric Mustang Mach-E last November at a splashy event ahead of the Los Angeles Auto Show. The highly anticipated model had been scheduled to debut this year. Ford has not officially postponed the release, but the company has said all launches will be delayed by about two months, potentially pushing the Mach-E into 2021.

Elon Musk, whose cars dominate the U.S. electric market, cut prices by thousands of dollars overnight. The Model 3 is now $2,000 cheaper, starting at $37,990. The Model S and Model X each dropped $5,000.

Musk engaged in a high-profile fight with California officials this month over Tesla’s factory in Fremont, California, which had been closed by shutdown orders Musk slammed as “fascist.” In a May 11 tweet, he said the company was reopening the plant in defiance of county policy. On May 16, Tesla told employees it had received official approval.

During most of the shutdown in California, the company managed to keep producing some cars thanks to better relations with local officials regulating its other factory, in Shanghai. That plant closed as the virus spread from Wuhan in late January, but the local government helped it reopen a few weeks later in early February.

First Zwickau, Then the World

The ID.3’s new electric underpinning, dubbed MEB, is key to VW’s strategy to sell battery-powered cars on a global scale at prices that will be competitive with similar combustion-engine vehicles. Automakers typically rely on such platforms to achieve economies of scale and, ultimately, profits. MEB will be applied to purely electric vehicles across all of the company’s mass-market brands, including Skoda and Seat.

VW said it spent $7 billion developing MEB after Ford last year agreed to use the technology for one of its European models. Separately, the group’s Audi and Porsche brands are built on a dedicated EV platform for luxury cars that the company says will be vital in narrowing the gap with Tesla.

VW plans to escalate its electric-car push by adding two factories, near Shanghai and Shenzhen, that it says could eventually roll out 600,000 cars annually, more cars than Tesla delivered globally last year.

While China is the initial goal, making a dent in Europe and the U.S. is the long-term one. Like China, Europe had been tightening emissions regulations significantly before the pandemic. New rules to reduce fleet emissions will gradually start to take effect this year, effectively forcing most manufacturers to sell plug-in hybrids and purely electric cars to avoid steep fines.

Because of the mandates, Europe’s commitment to electrification isn’t going away, said Aakash Arora, a managing director with Boston Consulting Group. “In the long term, we don’t see any relaxation in regulation,” he said.

For VW, this crisis wouldn’t be the first time it started a new chapter in difficult times. Diess saw an opportunity coming off the manufacturer’s years-long diesel emissions scandal that cost the company more than $33 billion to win approval for the industry’s most aggressive push into EVs. When VW unveiled the ID.3, officials compared its historic role to the iconic Beetle and the Golf, not knowing that this might hold in unintended ways: The Beetle arose from the ashes of World War II, and the Golf was greeted by the oil-price shock in the 1970s.

“We have a clear commitment to become CO2 neutral by 2050,” VW strategy chief Michael Jost said, “and there is no alternative to our electric-car strategy to achieve this.”

  • With assistance by Keith Naughton
  • Photo by Eduardo Arcos on Unsplash

Oil Firms Among Worst Hit As Wave Of Bankruptcies Hits Texas

Oil and gas companies, as well as the retail industry, are the worst hit sectors in the COVID-19 pandemic that swept through businesses in Texas, bankruptcy and restructuring lawyers say.

According to data provided exclusively to The Texas Lawbook by Androvett Legal Media research, more than 545 companies of all sectors in Texas filed for Chapter 11 protection from creditors between January 1 and May 5, 2020. This is a surge of 133 percent compared to the same period of 2019, Mark Curriden at The Texas Lawbook writes in Houston Chronicle.

Within Texas, Houston is the center of the wave of bankruptcies, which include many names in the retail and oil industries, according to the data and to bankruptcy partners at law firms.

In April, companies such as Diamond Offshore Drilling and Whiting Petroleum filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. U.S. shale gas pioneer Chesapeake Energy said in May it was evaluating a Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection reorganization—along with other options—as the low oil and gas prices weigh heavily on its finances and substantial outstanding debt.

The list is set to grow in coming weeks, according to legal experts.

“Oil and gas and the retail sector had a whole lot of stress even before COVID-19. The only surprising thing is that we haven’t seen the explosion of bankruptcy filings already. But they are still coming,” Lou Strubeck, head of the bankruptcy and restructuring practice at Norton Rose Fulbright, told The Texas Lawbook’s Mark Curriden.

According to Strubeck, creditors are not rushing for court reorganizations of energy companies because “they don’t know what they would do with the assets and they don’t want to run these companies.”

With less capital to invest in bankruptcy restructuring of oil firms than in the 2015-2016 downturn, private equity could sit on the sidelines, and we may see more “free fall” bankruptcies and fewer prepackaged bankruptcies, Matthew Cavanaugh, a bankruptcy partner with Jackson Walker in Houston, told The Texas Lawbook.

By Tsvetana Paraskova, May 25 for Oilprice.com

Here’s Why Oil Isn’t Likely to Go Negative Again This Month

Investors were shocked on April 20 when oil futures set for May delivery fell below zero for the first time ever . Although the negative oil prices lasted less than 24 hours, the plunge started a debate about whether it could happen again this month with the June futures.

In the days after the price first plunged, some analysts predicted it could happen again , because the dynamics in the market weren’t expected to change. But that now looks increasingly unlikely—both because of the dynamics of crude trading and because the oil market isn’t in as dire straits as it was two weeks ago. West Texas Intermediate crude futures have rallied more than 40% this month, to above $23 a barrel.

“No June will not go negative,” Richard Redoglia, CEO of Matrix Global, wrote in an email. “It might see some weakness, but the panic is over.” Matrix Global runs auctions for crude storage space.

To see why, it helps to understand oil trading.

West Texas futures—the financial instrument that went negative—give investors a unique way to track the oil market. They are contracts that result in the buyer receiving barrels of crude oil after the contracts expire. By comparison, Brent crude, the international oil benchmark, settles in cash. People who own West Texas crude on the day the contracts expire have to be prepared to receive 1,000 barrels of oil. Usually, that isn’t a problem because buyers can rent storage tanks in Cushing, Okla., the delivery point. But in April, all of the storage in Cushing was booked, so traders who were still holding the contract near expiration couldn’t put it anywhere. And no one wanted to buy the contracts. So they fell to negative $40 a barrel, implying that sellers would pay buyers $40,000 per contract.

Some of those dynamics are still in place. Covid-19 shutdowns have led to reduced oil demand, so oil producers have nowhere to put the oil they are pumping out. Instead of refining it into gasoline, they are putting more of it into storage. So storage is still tight in Cushing. People holding June futures won’t find much storage available for purchase.

But other dynamics make a negative prices less likely. For one thing, traders know that negative prices are theoretically possible. Before April, it wasn’t clear to many traders that negative prices were possible; the Chicago Mercantile Exchange adjusted its computer systems to allow for normal trading at negative prices in April. “The element of surprise is gone,” CFRA Research analyst Stewart Glickman wrote in an email.

Going into the weekend before the expiration of the May contract, there were more than 100,000 open contracts still trading. Many of those people probably expected to be able to sell them or roll those contracts over to the June contract. But come Monday, no one wanted to touch the May contracts, because they were trading at a deep discount to the June contracts. The pattern is known as contango, where oil set for delivery in future months is worth more than it is today, because people expect more people to be using oil in the future (in this case, because Covid-19 shutdowns are expected to ease).

Oil is still in contango today, but it isn’t nearly as steep as it was then. At its height, the spread between the June and July contract was about $6. Today, that spread is less than $2. And the biggest crude buyers have mostly avoided buying into the June contract, instead shifting their bets to July. The U.S. Oil Fund exchange-traded fund (ticker: USO), the most popular way for investors to bet on the price of crude, has already rolled out of the contract and into later-dated months. Open interest in the June contract is at less than half the level it was for the May contract at the same point, according to a report from ING on Thursday.

That has made the June contract less precarious. If most traders move out of it early, there won’t be many stuck looking for storage on the date of expiration again.

The new dynamic suggests that “market participants who do not have the capability to take physical delivery will likely not hold their position in the final days of the contract’s life,” Warren Patterson, head of commodities strategy at ING, wrote in the report.

Beyond the trading dynamics, the oil market has been moving closer toward balance in recent days. Producers around the world have cumulatively reduced their output by more than 10%, and demand has slowly started to return as countries have begun reducing restrictions on movement. As oil held in storage starts getting used for gasoline and diesel, Cushing tanks may open up too.

Nonetheless, some analysts think the recent rally in oil prices could fade. Glickman doesn’t expect oil to go negative, but he also doesn’t expect things to be hunky-dory for a while.

“With all that said, I’m still not a believer in this oil rally,” he wrote. “Prices don’t have to go negative to worry about rising storage and terrible visibility about the extent to any demand recovery.”

By Avi Salzman from Barron’s on May 7, 2020

Independent ARA Stocks Recover on the Week

May 22, 2020 – The volume of oil products held independently in storage in the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp (ARA) refining and trading hub rose the past week, according to consultancy Insights Global.

Inventories of almost all surveyed products rose on the week to yesterday, with only fuel oil inventories down.

Fuel oil stocks on the week, amid a rise in export interest for the product in northwest Europe. The Suezmax tanker Leonid Loza departed the ARA region on 17 May with fuel oil, which it could deliver to Singapore, according to data from oil analytics firm Vortexa. And the very large crude carrier (VLCC) Amyntas also loaded from Rotterdam on 17 May, but is yet to declare its destination. Fuel oil cargoes also departed ARA for the Caribbean, where it could go into storage, potentially for local bunkering. Fuel oil was also spotted departing ARA tanks for a voyage to Saudi Arabia, where high-sulphur fuel oil is typically burned for power generation.

Gasoline stocks rose on the week, their highest since at least 2011. The stock build came even as export interest for northwest European gasoline increased, probably driven by continued contango structure, where prompt prices are weaker than those for future delivery, which is incentivising putting gasoline and blending components into storage. Gasoline cargoes departed ARA for typical export destinations the US and west Africa, but vessels were also heading for the Suez canal for voyages to Asia, including China. Transatlantic gasoline bookings have surged this month, as European exporters look to the US — where demand has shown signs of improvement — to clear supplies.

Independently-held gasoil stocks rose, their highest since October, as traders look to take advantage of the contango structure by putting product into tank. Gasoil entered ARA storage from India, Norway, Russia and Saudi Arabia this week, while outflows were recorded to the UK. The rise in inventories came even as gasoil flows up the Rhine to inland markets reached their highest weekly level since at least 2017, according to Insights Global data. Diesel in the inland truck market has traded premiums to ARA barge prices — up by around 18pc from January-February premiums — as German imports have remained robust in the face of low consumer demand.

Jet fuel inventories rose to their highest since May 2017. Jet fuel arrived at ARA from Saudi Arabia and the UAE principally, and departed for the UK. End-user jet kerosine demand remains extremely weak as a result of travel restrictions linked to the Covid-19 pandemic. Jet fuel could arrive in northwest Europe from east of Suez in May, which would be the highest this year, according to Argus tracking data.

Naphtha inventories rose on the week, as an Aframax tanker delivered the product from Algeria, in addition to inflows from Russia and the UK. No naphtha outflows were recorded, amid suggestions that naphtha demand from the petrochemical sector has been weak, leading to a reversal in the typical flow of naphtha up the Rhine to petrochemical units.

Reporter: Robert Harvey

Independent ARA Oil Product Stocks Fall Back

May 14, 2020 – The volume of oil products held independently in storage in the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp (ARA) refining and trading hub fell during the past week, after reaching four-year highs a week earlier.

Inventories of all surveyed products fell on the week. Gasoline stocks fell most heavily on an outright basis, with inventories decreasing by on the week. Tankers departed the area for China, the Mediterranean, Port Said for orders, the US and west Africa. Demand from the US has increased over the past week as more states ease the restrictions originally prompted by the Covid-19 outbreak. Tankers arrived from France, Spain and the UK.

Naphtha stocks fell most heavily in percentage terms, dropping on the week. The volume of naphtha leaving the ARA for inland destinations along the river Rhine was low, and inventories inland remained high. Tankers arrived in the ARA area from Algeria, Russia and the UK and none departed.

Jet fuel stocks fell on the week. Low consumer demand brought refining margins to fresh all-time lows on 13 May. Negative jet fuel margins across the globe have resulted in refiners maximising diesel output at the expense of jet fuel, reducing the overall volume of jet fuel produced. A cargo departed the ARA area for the UK and none arrived.

Gasoil inventories fell. The flow of gasoil barges up the river Rhine reached its highest level since September, supported by an increase in Rhine water levels and higher consumer demand for diesel inland. But diesel margins remained at four-year lows on high stocks around the continent.

Fuel oil stocks were effectively stable on the week, falling slightly. Local demand for bunker fuels provided little outlet for fuel oil, but tankers did depart for the Mideast Gulf, the Mediterranean and the North Sea for orders. An Aframax arrived from Russia, while smaller cargoes arrived from Denmark, Finland, Italy and the UK.

Reporter: Thomas Warner