Anonymous ID: ed1a80 April 20, 2020, 3:04 p.m. No.8866180   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6407

Here Is The Full Explanation Behind Today's Unprecedented Negative Oil Price

April 20, 2020

 

Courtesy of IHSMarkit's energy vice president Roger Diwan

 

How did you end up with negative oil prices today? This happens when a physical futures contract find no buyers close to or at expiry.

 

Let me explain what that means:

 

A physical contract such as the NYMEX WTI has a delivery point at Cushing, OK, & date, in this occurrence May. So people who hold the contract at the end of the trading window have to take physical delivery of the oil they bought on the futures market. This is very rare.

 

It means that in the last few days of the futures trading cycle, (which is tomorrow for this one) speculative or paper futures positions start rolling over to the next contract. This is normally a pretty undramatic affair.

 

What is happening today is trades or speculators who had bought the contract are finding themselves unable to resell it, and have no storage booked to get delivered the crude in Cushing, OK, where the delivery is specified in the contract.

 

This means that all the storage in Cushing is booked, and there is no price they can pay to store it, or they are totally inexperienced in this game and are caught holding a contract they did not understand the full physical aspect of as the time clock expires.

 

The contract roll and liquidity crunch that made the extreme sell-off today possible but it DOESN’T necessarily represent futures market conditions: NYMEX June settled today at $21.13.

 

The June contract is not out of the woods either: today’s action indicate that physical oil markets at Cushing are not in good shape and that storage is getting very full.

 

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/here-full-explanation-behind-oils-unprecedented-negative-price