What does it mean when oil prices go negative?
Recently, the
prices of West
Texas Intermediate (WTI), the best quality of crude oil in
the world, fell to minus $40.32 a barrel in
interlay trade in New York (the USA).
- It means that the seller of
crude oil would be paying the buyer $40 for each barrel that is bought.
- It is the lowest
crude oil price ever recorded below the zero mark while
the previous
lowest was recorded immediately after World War II (WWII).
Oil Pricing
- Generally the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC) used to work as
a cartel and fix prices in a favourable band.
- OPEC is led by
Saudi Arabia, which is the largest exporter of crude oil in the world
(single-handedly exporting 10% of the global demand).
- It could bring down prices by
increasing oil production and raise prices by cutting production.
- The global oil pricing mainly depends
upon the partnership between the global oil exporters instead
of well-functioning competition.
- Cutting
oil production or completely
shutting down an oil well is a difficult decision, because restarting it
is immensely costly and complicated.
- Moreover, if a country cuts
production, it risks losing market share if
other countries do not follow the suit.
- Recently, OPEC has been working
with Russia,
as OPEC+ to
fix the global prices and supply.
Reasons for Price Fall
- Crude oil prices were already
falling before the global lockdown due to the higher
supply and lower demand.
- They
were close to $60 a barrel at the start of 2020 and, by March-end, they were
closer to $20 a barrel.
- Problems arose when Saudi
Arabia and Russia disagreed over the production cuts, required
to keep prices stable.
- Consequently, Saudi Arabia led
oil-exporting countries started undercutting each other on price while producing
the same quantities of oil.
- This strategy was unsustainable on
its own and the global spread of Covid-19 made it
even worse as it sharply reduced the economic activity and
the oil-demand.
- Oil-exporting countries decided
to cut
production by 10 million barrels a day (the highest
production cuts) and yet the demand for oil was reducing
even further.
- This supply demand mismatch resulted
in exhausted
storage capacities.
- It is important to highlight
that the US became the largest producer of crude oil in 2018 and
the current US President has been pushing for higher oil prices instead
of making efforts for lower prices like the previous US Presidents.
- The oil prices started falling
steeply because the May contracts for WTI were due to expire on 21st April, 2020 which
posed huge challenges for both the oil
producers and the consumers (contractors/buyers).
- Producers: They started selling the
oil at unbelievably low prices because shutting production would have been
costlier to restart when compared to the marginal loss on May sales.
- Consumers: They were facing the problem
of storage. There is no space to store the oil even if
they decided to buy and take the delivery.
- Accepting the oil delivery, paying for the
transportation and storage would have been costlier than the hit on contract
price.
- In the short term, for both the
holders of the delivery contract and the oil producers, it was less costly to
pay $40 a barrel and get rid of the oil instead of storing it
(consumers/buyers) or stopping production (producers). So this led to the negative
WTI oil contract prices.
Future of Oil Prices
- It was the WTI
price for May in the US markets that went so low. Crude
oil prices at other places fell but not too much.
- Prices for June and
the coming months are pegged between
$20 and $35 a barrel.
- Investment
budgets of exploration and production companies are expected
to drop because of the low shale oil prices.
- Normally, this should force oil
exporting countries to cut back production and negate the excess
supply, restoring balance in the oil markets but the
possibility of recent events from happening again cannot be ruled out.
- Eventually, it would be the demand-supply
mismatch (adjusted for how much can be stored away) that
will decide
the fate of oil prices.
Impact on India
- There is no
direct impact on India because Indian crude oil basket
does not comprise WTI and it only has Brent and oil from some of the Gulf
countries.
- However, the weakness
in WTI reflects on the falling prices of Indian basket as
well because oil is traded globally and has indirect
impacts.
- The lower price can be beneficial
for India in two ways:
- For
Individuals: If
the government passes on the lower prices to consumers, then individual
consumption will be boosted whenever the economic
recovery starts in India.
- For
Governments: If
both, central and the state, governments decide to levy higher taxes on
oil, it can boost government revenues.
Difference
between Brent and WTI
- Brent
crude oil originates
from oil fields in the North Sea between the
Shetland Islands and Norway, while West Texas Intermediate (WTI)
is sourced from US oil fields, primarily
in Texas, Louisiana, and North Dakota.
- WTI with
a lower sulphur content (0.24%) than Brent
(0.37%), is considered "sweeter".
- Both oils are relatively
light, but Brent has a slightly higher API gravity, making
WTI the lighter of the two.
- American
Petroleum Institute (API) gravity is
an indicator of the density of crude oil or refined products.
- Brent
crude price is
the international benchmark price used by the OPEC while WTI
crude price is a benchmark for US oil
prices.
- Since India
imports primarily from OPEC countries, Brent is the
benchmark for oil prices in India.
- Cost of
shipping for Brent crude
is typically lower, since it is produced
near the sea and it can be put on ships immediately.
Shipping of WTI is priced higher since it is produced in landlocked areas like
Cushing, Oklahoma where the storage facilities are limited.
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