Khaleej Times

Why oil had its worst week in a month

- John Kemp

london — Oil traders are increasing­ly convinced the market will rebalance over the next year with a major drawdown in crude and products stocks.

Conviction about market rebalancin­g is showing in a big rise in the calendar spreads for West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) and especially Brent crude in the last two months. Calendar spreads, which measure price difference­s between any pair of contracts with different delivery dates, are closely tied to changes in the supply-demand balance.

Calendar spreads are convention­ally expressed as the price of a near-dated futures contract (such as October 2017) minus the price for a contract maturing later (such as March 2018).

When the oil market is oversuppli­ed, and crude stocks are high and rising, calendar spreads tend to be negative, a state known as contango (near-dated contracts trade at a discount).

When the market is undersuppl­ied, and stocks are low and falling, calendar spreads tend to be positive, a state known as backwardat­ion (near-dated contracts trade at a premium).

The relationsh­ip between spreads and stocks was identified by the economist Holbrook Working in the 1930s in relation to grain futures trading.

But the same relationsh­ip between spreads, inventorie­s and the supply-demand balance has been

The contango in WTI, Brent futures has been narrowing progressiv­ely since early 2016 evident in the oil market since the 1990s. As the oil market has cycled between periods of undersuppl­y and oversupply, the calendar spreads have cycled between backwardat­ion and contango.

Brent spreads slumped into contango in the second half of 2014 as the oil market became oversuppli­ed, and have stayed there for the last three years as the market struggled to digest excess stocks.

But as the market transition­s from oversupply in 2014-15 towards a period of undersuppl­y in 2017-18, spreads have tightened.

The contango in WTI and Brent futures has been narrowing progressiv­ely since early 2016, which is consistent with a market starting to draw down stocks as a result of lower supply and faster demand growth.

In the later stages of rebalancin­g, spreads are likely to move into backwardat­ion to increase supply, moderate demand and stabilise inventorie­s. Something like this appears to be happening with an unusually large seasonal reduction in crude stocks in the United States.

Saudi Arabia has pledged to reduce its exports in August and September, and is curbing shipments to the United States, to accelerate the rebalancin­g. In response, the contango in WTI has narrowed sharply in recent days, and Brent futures are now trading in a small backwardat­ion for the nearest-todeliver contracts.

As the oil market continues to rebalance, WTI and Brent are likely to move more deeply into backwardat­ion. —

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 ?? Reuters ?? Saudi Arabia has pledged a number of measures to accelerate the oil market’s rebalancin­g. —
Reuters Saudi Arabia has pledged a number of measures to accelerate the oil market’s rebalancin­g. —

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