National Post

U.S. oil plunges 25%, Brent falls below US$20

- Stephanie Kelly

• Internatio­nal benchmark Brent crude fell below US$ 20 a barrel and U. S. crude plunged 25 per cent on Monday, driven lower by skittish investors fleeing the U. S. benchmark due to lack of available storage to deal with a coronaviru­s- induced collapse in demand.

Even as government­s worldwide are taking tentative steps toward reducing restrictio­n on movement to help economies rebound, fuel demand remains weak.

Fuel demand is down 30 per cent globally, and storage is becoming precious, with roughly 85 per cent of worldwide onshore storage full as of last week, according to Kpler data.

Economic concerns continue to plague the market. Global economic output is expected to contract by two per cent this year — worse than the financial crisis — while demand has collapsed by 30 per cent because of the pandemic.

U. S. West Texas Intermedia­te crude futures ( WTI) fell US$4.16, or 24.6 per cent, to settle at US$12.78 a barrel. Brent crude slid US$ 1.45, or 6.8 per cent, to settle at US$19.99 a barrel.

Traders also said the crude contract is down in part because retail investment vehicles like exchange- traded funds are shifting their investment­s away from front month June contracts to avoid getting trapped as many did a week ago, when the oil contract dropped to minus US$37.63 a barrel.

Oil futures ended their third-straight week of losses last week with a 24-per-cent drop for Brent and a sevenper- cent slide for WTI. The markets have fallen for eight of the past nine weeks.

After last week’s losses, the United States Oil Fund LP, the largest oil exchange product, said it would further shift its holdings into later-dated contracts, selling all of its holdings in the June contract. Its shares fell more than 16 per cent on Monday.

That fund was hit hard last week after the May contract lapsed into negative territory just before its expiry. USO at the time did not hold any May contracts.

As of Friday, the fund held nearly 14,000 NYMEX June contracts, roughly four per cent of the current open interest in the June contract. In the last several days the fund has sold a sizable part of its June position; in Monday’s announceme­nt, it said it will sell the rest of its June holdings by Thursday.

“The USO filing undermines confidence in the oil market for June, and it has sunk prices today,” said Cailin Birch at The Economist Intelligen­ce Unit. “However, it doesn’t change the economic outlook for June, which was always going to be difficult.

The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) said it will suspend all open positions for retail investor products linked to commoditie­s futures, including crude oil, natural gas, copper and soybeans, from Tuesday.

Crude oil stockpiles at the Cushing, Okla., hub for WTI rose over six per cent in the week to April 24 to around 65 million barrels, market participan­ts said, citing a Monday report from Genscape. However, inventorie­s only increased 0.5 per cent from Tuesday through Friday.

“Inputs in Cushing have slowed a bit, which either signals they’re finding alternativ­e places to put the oil or a major drop in production,” said Phil Flynn, analyst at Price Futures Group.

 ?? Bing Guan / Blombe rg ?? About 85 per cent of worldwide onshore fuel storage is full due to the drop in demand spurred by COVID-19.
Bing Guan / Blombe rg About 85 per cent of worldwide onshore fuel storage is full due to the drop in demand spurred by COVID-19.

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