Kuwait Times

Cushing’s oil market clout wanes amid US export boom

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NEW YORK: The volume of oil sitting in 300 steel tanks in a nine-square-mile radius in Cushing, Oklahoma has long been a key barometer for the health of US crude supply and the nation’s benchmark for daily trading of billions of dollars in the commodity.

But those tanks could soon drain to levels near effectivel­y empty, even as US oil production soars past a new record of 10.4 million barrels per day. Oil supplies have fallen before in Cushing for a variety of seasonal or market-driven reasons. But this time, there is no shortage of crude in the market. In fact, US production is straining pipeline and storage capacity. The declining volumes stored at Cushing reflects a more permanent shift, underscori­ng the hub’s waning influence as the primary measuring stick for the US oil market and the leading barometer of future supply, demand and prices.

Companies are now spending millions of dollars building infrastruc­ture to facilitate trading and storage elsewhere, such as in Houston and other Gulf Coast ports. That could pave the way for a change in the US benchmark oil price, used to value tens of billions of dollars of crude and futures contracts every day. The current benchmark - called West Texas Intermedia­te crude, or “WTI” - has been derived from the price of physical oil delivered to Cushing for more than three decades.

Traders and major global crude buyers have advocated replacing WTI with a new benchmark futures contract that would reflect the value of crude delivered to the Gulf Coast. The price of oil in Cushing which bills itself as “the pipeline crossroads of the world” - is used to value crude grades produced around the United States and some oil imported from Canada, Mexico, and South America. Prices at the hub also provide the basis for an average of 1.3 million WTI futures contracts worth about $82 billion at current prices - that change hands on the CME Group’s New York Mercantile Exchange every day, making it one of the world’s most actively traded commoditie­s. Crude flows change

But as more pipelines are built to take oil from US shale fields to Gulf refineries or for export markets, much of the crude produced in the giant Permian Basin oilfield in Texas and elsewhere no longer passes through Cushing. Instead, producers are increasing­ly shipping directly to seaports such as Houston, where vessels carry the oil to dozens of countries worldwide. That reflects a major transforma­tion in global crude flows since the United States lifted a four-decade ban on oil exports in late 2015. Some traders and buyers argue the benchmark needs to change to reflect this.

Joshua Wade, a crude oil marketer in Oklahoma, sees the benchmark delivery point moving south before long. “That’s the direction it’s moving,” he said. “As opposed to importing, now you’re exporting through the same infrastruc­ture ... The oil capital of the nation is in Houston.”

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