The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Hedge funds bet big on oil as OPEC gives them a free put option

-

LONDON: Hedge funds and other money managers have amassed a very large bullish position in crude oil futures and options without so far having much impact on oil prices.

Hedge funds raised their combined net long position in the three main derivative contracts linked to Brent and WTI by another 51 million barrels in the week to Feb 14.

Funds now hold a net long position equivalent to a record 903 million barrels of oil, according to an analysis of records published by regulators and exchanges.

The combined net long position has a notional valuation of more than US$49 billion, which is the highest since July 2014.

Hedge funds hold more than 9.5 long positions for every 1 short position in Brent and WTI combined, the highest ratio since May 2014.

Fund managers now have the most bullish view on oil since the first half of 2014, when Libya’s exports were nearly halted by civil war and Islamic State fighters were racing across northern Iraq.

The scale of the net long position is puzzling and raises important questions about how it will eventually unwind.

Fund managers have been able to increase their bullish bets with almost no disturbanc­e to the market price of crude. Volatility has been most remarkable by its absence.

Funds have increased their net long position by 107 million barrels since Dec. 13 while prices have traded sideways in a narrow range of around US$55.50 +/- US$1.25 per barrel.

Oil prices have been steady at around the US$55 level most energy profession­als expected would be the average for the year at the start of 2017.

The accumulati­on of a large long or short position by fund managers has normally been the harbinger of a sharp reversal in oil prices when it unwinds.

So the massive net long position has triggered a heated debate about whether hedge fund managers are fully invested yet or have the potential to increase their exposure even further.

The record net position in barrels and high ratio of long to short positions both indicate the position may already have become stretched.

But that has not stopped hedge fund managers from continuing to raise their combined position in four of the last six weeks.

And while the notional value of the net long position has more than doubled from a recent low of US$20 billion in the middle of November it remains well below the peak of US$69 billion reported in July 2014.

The halving of oil prices since the mid-2014 means fund managers can run a net position twice as large in barrel terms for the same commitment of capital.

Some analysts therefore insist funds still have scope to increase their exposure significan­tly in the weeks and months ahead.

But that raises questions about whether the very large hedge fund position in mid-2014, immediatel­y before the biggest slump in prices for 30 years, is the right baseline for comparison.

There have been suggestion­s that much of the increase in net long positions comes from pension funds and hedge funds pursuing inflation-linked macro strategies rather than specialist commodity funds and trend followers.

Capital committed by pension funds and macro funds may be more sticky and less prone to abrupt reversals than commitment­s from commodity specialist­s and trend chasers.

But there is no way to identify the different types of money managers separately in the published data from regulators and exchanges. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia