On December 23, crude oil prices flirted with
dollarsignr30. That barrier marked the bottom
of the price decline that commenced in early
July after oil futures hit dollarsignr147. The
dollarsignr117 price decline has done much to
alter the current and prospective landscape for
the oil and gas industry and the global
economy, too. Just when it seemed oil prices
were headed toward zero, a wave of optimism
swept over the crude oil trading pits after
Christmas and prices rallied through the start
of 2009 heading back toward dollarsignr50.
During the early days of the first full week of
January, crude oil futures prices actually
traded above dollarsignr50 during the day, but
failed to hold on to that level on the close.
Having run up by almost dollarsignr20 a barrel,
it was not surprising that traders began taking
profits since the dollarsignr50 price –
viewed as a critical technical trading support
level – hadn’t held. At the same time,
increasingly disappointing economic figures
were being released showing further significant
deterioration in the health of the U.S. economy
and other major economies around the
world.
The reversal in crude oil prices reversed what
had become a new bull market for crude oil into
another bear market. The question for which
both commodity traders and energy stock
investors are seeking an answer to: What will
be the catalyst to end the bear market and
reignite another oil bull market? (That is an
important driver for energy stock prices.) A
better economic outlook would be one condition,
but possibly a view that the stimulus being
injected into economies around the world will
eventually bring a surge in inflation, which
often boosts commodity prices.
Along with the worse than expected economic
statistics released over the past few weeks
came a strengthening of the U.S. dollar,
which tends to depress crude oil
prices. The increasing economic problems in
Europe and Japan, and now China and India, has
prompted a flight of capital to U.S. government
bonds further helping to boost the value of the
U.S. dollar. Probably more challenging for the
near-term direction for oil prices is the
growing volume of crude oil being produced and
not consumed. OPEC’s several attempts to reign
in its members’ production flow last year have
only recently begun to have an impact on the
available supply of oil globally, but in the
interim large quantities of oil were arriving
at markets that do not need it. Some large oil
companies and crude oil trading firms have
contracted a handful of very large crude
carriers (VLCCs) to store oil. They saw that
future oil prices were sufficiently high and
the opportunity for oil buyers to purchase
current volumes and sell contracts to deliver
the oil at some future date and make a profit
even after paying the storage fees.
The volume of oil stored in tankers has climbed
to 80 million barrels, based on 40 VLCCs each
holding roughly two million barrels of oil.
According to Frontline (FRO-NYSE), the world’s
largest operator of VLCCs, the current rate to
charter these tankers is about
dollarsignr75,000 a day. That translates into
about dollarsignr1.12 a barrel per month for
storage. As long as a buyer of crude oil can
cover this cost for storing the oil, he will
engage in these time-spread trades. The
contango condition (future crude oil prices
being substantially higher than current prices)
that exists in the crude oil market today as it
relates to West Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil
has begun to raise questions of whether the
price for this crude actually reflects the oil
market’s underlying fundamentals, or rather is
a victim of a regional market imbalance between
supply and demand.
One of the manifestations of weak WTI oil
market fundamentals is the continuing build in
oil inventories despite the relentless drop in
price. Last week, the Energy Information
Administration (EIA) reported that for the week
ending January 9, crude oil inventories,
excluding oil in the strategic petroleum
reserve, increased by 1.2 million barrels. This
pushed total inventories to 326.6 million
barrels, above the upper limit of the
historical average volume of inventory at this
time of the year. More important was that
inventories continued to climb at Cushing,
Oklahoma, where WTI is traded and the global
oil price established. Cushing’s inventories
increased by 800,000 barrels bringing storage
to 33 million barrels, which is rapidly
approaching the maximum operable storage
capacity (34 million barrels) based on the
assumption that 80% of the 42.2 million barrels
of total capacity is available as working
storage.
The impact of rising Cushing inventories has
been to depress current spot oil prices because
WTI oil is landlocked. The spread between WTI
and other popular crude oils has widened to an
extreme seldom seen. Since WTI has limited
access to waterborne oil markets that could
relieve its inventory challenge, it has
recently traded at substantial discounts to
other domestic crude oils in the physical oil
market. Last Wednesday, WTI traded in the
physical market in Houston at a 15¢ per barrel
discount to the Mars blend (the representative
crude oil produced in the Gulf of Mexico) when
it normally sells at a
dollarsignr4-dollarsignr5 per barrel premium.
What has further demonstrated the recent
distortion of the WTI oil market has been the
relationship between WTI and the North Sea’s
Brent oil, the most frequently traded barrel in
the European crude oil market. In recent days,
the spread between WTI and Brent has soared to
unusually high premiums. Traditionally, Brent,
a lower quality crude oil compared to WTI,
sells at a discount of dollarsignr1.50 a
barrel, but in recent days has seen that morph
into a premium that widened to about
dollarsignr10 a barrel. Throughout history, WTI
and Brent have essentially tracked
each other so closely that it appears they are
one and the same on any long-term price chart.
On the other hand, over the past two weeks, as
the storage volumes at Cushing have approached
capacity, the WTI premium over Brent has fallen
to a substantial discount. Notice the upturn of
the Brent price line (in red) compared to WTI
in recent weeks. To show the dynamics of these
markets, especially in recent days, we plotted
the spread between WTI and Brent over the time
period. Since summer the premium for WTI has
been running about dollarsignr5, except for the
one day in late September when WTI spiked due
to a short-squeeze in the commodities trading
market. Over the past almost 13 months, Brent
has largely traded at a discount to WTI, which
can be seen by the gap between the two price
lines on the chart in Exhibit 4.
Another characteristic of the
crude oil market this year has been the daily
volatility. Oil prices change by 5% or more 39
times in 2008, one more than the number of days
it happened in 1990.
We were curious about the nature
of the oil markets when there was this huge
increase in price volatility. We plotted the
daily price changes in the crude oil futures
prices for 1990 and 2008. What we found was
that when oil prices entered a dynamic state
price volatility increased. We surmise that
this is related to the uncertainty about the
strength and stability of the trends moving the
oil price. This has a tendency of attracting
traders and speculators that boosts the trading
volatility. But it is clear that in 1990 when
oil prices were steady, volatility was less
than when the oil price was moving either
higher or lower.

In 2008, the volatility in the
crude oil market seemed to be associated with
the change in the health of the credit market,
i.e., volatility picked up around the time of
the failure of Lehman Brothers and the sale of
Merrill Lynch, and when credit market turmoil
impacted hedge funds and the credit markets. In
other words, the trading volatility seems to be
more associated with broad financial market
events and less with crude oil market
fundamentals.
This price action suggests one of three courses
of action will evolve. One is that Cushing
inventories reach their maximum capacity so WTI
prices plummet to the point at which refiners
will buy the oil to produce product because
almost whatever product prices are they will
make a positive spread. Second, domestic
consumption rebounds causing a jump in crude
oil purchases, or third, the OPEC production
cuts reduce supply sufficiently and less oil
flows into the U.S. leaving greater room for
WTI oil to supply normal, albeit lower, demand.
We suspect that before anyone of these courses
of action develops, it may be some weeks into
the new year. That suggests there is great risk
that WTI crude oil prices could fall into the
dollarsignr20s a barrel range. But the
important thing is that the WTI price will not
be reflecting an accurate reading of the
underlying supply and demand trends in the
global oil market.
The uncertainty about the health of the economy
and the oil market is also demonstrated by
events happening in the petroleum product
market. Last week saw the government report
that 6.4 million barrels of distillate
including heating oil was added to inventories.
Analysts are offering two possible
explanations. One is that it reflects weak
consumer demand, a reading of the health of the
U.S. economy. The other conclusion is that
refiners are boosting production of heating oil
fearing more cold weather. We believe this
conclusion more than the first for the reason
that people can die from a lack of heating oil,
as opposed to a lack of cooling during extreme
heat waves in the summer. The economic
hardships being experienced in the country
today should be a governing principle. Public
sentiment and political retaliation against
companies that allowed citizens to die during a
period of extreme cold due to a shortage of
heating oil, just after oil prices have fallen
by dollarsignr100 a barrel and the world is
swimming in crude oil, would be extreme. This
is not a position oil industry executives want
to be in given the low esteem they are already
held in by the public.
Just how bad is the global oil market? In
reality, the latest forecast by the
International Energy Agency (IEA) cut its
estimate of 2008 and 2009 oil demand are merely
catching up with the prior dour forecasts by
the EIA and OPEC. The IEA cut its estimate of
2008’s global oil demand growth to a decline of
300,000 barrels per day (b/d). It has reduced
its demand forecast for 2009 by 950,000 b/d
producing an estimate that demand will fall by
500,000 b/d from 2008. The IEA is now firmly in
the camp of successive yearly oil demand
contractions for the first time since 1982 and
1983. Our only concern is that the IEA’s
forecasting record in recent years has
always been too optimistic. Time will tell.