Houston Chronicle

Refiners’ profit margins for gasoline jump

- By Jeffrey Bair

The profit to make gasoline from crude is at its highest since July as the market chases supplies ahead of anexpected recovery this summer.

The spread between West Texas Intermedia­te crude and gasoline futures on the Nymex climbed above $12 a barrel Friday and has floated near that level as refiners start to build up gasoline inventorie­s for expected higher summer demand.

Many refiners reduced operating rates for months or were forced to shut down to cope with last year’s demand collapse, forcing some of them into the market to buy supplies now and sell later when demand is expected to improve due to the Covid-19 vaccine rollout. The refining utilizatio­n rate is still at the lowest for this time of year in data going back 30 years, government data show.

The pullback in output has kept gasoline inventorie­s from ballooning despite the weakest winter demand since 1997, according to the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion. Stockpiles of the fuel for the week ended January 1 were 4 percent lower than the same week a year ago.

“Refiner crack spreads have rallied over the last several months on improved product demand outlooks as a result of the vaccine rollout,” Truist Securities analyst Jordan Levy said in an email.

Rising margins come after months of lockdowns and a widespread shift toworking fromhome slashed fuel consumptio­n, forcing a spate of refinery closures in the U.S. last year. Operators including Marathon Petroleum Crop., Phillips 66, and Royal Dutch Shell Plc either permanentl­y shut sites or converted them into renewable diesel plants.

Typically, gasoline demand picks up with the summer driving season and the industry shifts to a different specificat­ion of the fuel for the warmer weather.

Producers are accumulati­ng gasoline for summer use tobeprepar­ed to sell later at higher value, lifting the prompt market, said Robert Campbell, head of oil products research at Energy Aspects.

Still, the EIA is forecastin­g this year’s gasoline consumptio­n to only partially recover. It predicted consumptio­n to be 8.69 million barrels day in 2021, that’s nearly 400,000 barrels a day lower than what itwas in 2019, according to its latest Short Term Energy Outlook.

Also, some refineries might not be able to cash in on the improved margin because the cost of biofuels like ethanol has surged. Federally-mandated standards dictate that a portion of gasoline contains a renewable fuel component. Some large refiners don’t blend the components into their gasoline-blending is performed by others further downthe supply chainand are subsequent­ly required to purchase biofuel credits.

Those costs have risen across the last two months and can reduce the gasoline refining margin by at least $3 a barrel.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States