National Post (National Edition)

Canadian crude starts to rebound from lows

- Kevin orland

CALGARY •The canadian energy industry may not be popping champagne just yet, but a rebound in local crude prices may offer hope.

With producers like Cenovus Energy Inc. shipping more oil by rail and U.S. refineries starting backup af- ter a heavy maintenanc­e sea- son, canadian crude has re- covered some of its historic losses. Since hitting a record low on nov .15, the spot price of heavy Western Canada Select has risen 35 percent, or US$4.65 a barrel.

“It’s not that our constraint­s have gone away, but they are pretty stable,” Joan Pinto at CIBC said.

As WCS has been climbing, the West Texas Intermedia­te benchmark has been falling, driven by increased supplies and speculatio­n OPEC may forgo a production cut.

The combinatio­n of rising WCS and falling WTI has narrowed the gap between the two grades by 22 per cent, or about US$9.50 a barrel, since the middle of the month. The differenti­al — an important gauge used in Alberta government budget projection­s — has shrunk by about a third from its record of US$50 a barrel last month.

Futures prices indicate that WCS will continue gradually recovering, narrowing the differenti­al, currently at US$33.50 a barrel, to about US$25 by May, Pinto said.

Still, despite the recent rebound, WCS prices are well below long-term averages, and new pipelines won’t be coming online until late next year at the earliest. That will reduce cash flow for producers and prompt some to keep a portion of their output shut in until prices recover further.

“Producers are still hurting,” Pinto said.

Oil prices fell more than one per cent on Tuesday, in conjunctio­n with sagging stock markets.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada