Trader who rode oil-price crash to 34% gain warns ‘extreme weakness’ may be in store the next 4 to 6 weeks

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

There’s no easy way out of the global oil glut that’s caused a historic, and occasionally bizarre, collapse in crude oil prices this spring, according to a long-time commodity-focused hedge-fund manager who has scored big gains during the market’s slide.

The next four to six weeks are all but certain to see continued increases in crude oil inventories as a result of the demand destruction wrought by the COVID-19 pandemic and a reluctance until recently by major producers to curb output, said Doug King, co-founder and chief investment officer of the London-based Merchant Commodity Fund, in a Wednesday interview. That could translate into ”extreme weakness” over that stretch, he said.

The fund, which has benefited in part from short bets on gasoline, crude and other commodities, is up 34% year-to-date, King said.

“The industry seems to be a little bit reluctant to take the medicine that everyone else is taking — shuttering, furloughing, trying to balance supply and demand,” King said. “Obviously it’s a huge part of the wealth of many, many countries and so I understand it’s extremely painful, but it is no different to what is happening around the world with every other sort of resource or company who’s been told to produce 20% less than they were or 30% less than they were.”

In One Chart:About 150 years of oil-price history in one chart illustrating crude’s spectacular plunge below $0 a barrel

Instead, the world was flooded with additional crude as Saudi Arabia and Russia engaged in a price war that began in early March and that was ended just last week with an agreement by major producers to curb output.

When the lockdowns end, much will depend on how quickly economies can revive and how producers, including those in the U.S. shale patch, continue to respond, King said. That would allow inventories to stop rising and begin to plateau, though if the lockdowns extend into June or beyond, things will get only more difficult.

As economies come back to life, oil refineries won’t be roaring immediately back toward full capacity. But a pickup in gasoline demand, which has been destroyed as motorists stay home and airlines are all but grounded, could finally put a lid on rising crude supplies. Capacity utilization at U.S. refineries was at a 12-year low of 67.6% last week, according to Energy Information Administration figures.

Refiners are running at low capacity because gasoline demand has fallen as much as 50%, and storing gasoline is more onerous than storing crude or distillates, King said. The Oil Price Information Service estimated that March gasoline demand fell 19.1% versus the same month last year, while demand in the first half of April was down 48.8% versus the same time frame in 2019.

Indeed, gasoline was a big part of King’s strategy this spring. Short bets on gasoline futures RB00, +0.25% paid off in a big way in March. King, a veteran commodity trader, said experience trading in the physical energy markets gives the fund an edge.

“You need to understand impact of what demand destruction can do, and what is available storage, and what people will do refining-wise to solve the problems,” he said.

Front-month Nymex gasoline futures RB.1, -0.30% plunged 76.5% from a Jan. 6 close of $1.7544 a gallon to 41.18 cents on March 23. Gasoline futures have retraced some of that decline, but fell 7% this week to end Friday at 66.12 cents.

Front-month Nymex WTI futures CL.1, +1.41%, the new front-month, fell 32.3% this week, the largest percentage decline on record, according to Dow Jones Market Data, to end Friday at $16.94 a barrel and is down 73% so far this year. Brent crude BRN.1, +1.67%, the global benchmark, fell 23.7% this week to end Friday at $21.44 and is down 67.5% year-to-date.

The latest round of turmoil in the oil market has been blamed for renewed volatility in the stock market, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, +1.10% and S&P 500 SPX, +1.39% falling earlier this week as oil prices collapsed and bounced Wednesday as crude prices stabilized.

King and others at the fund have experience trading in the physical energy market, which he said allows them to “understand what’s happening in the in the oil market at the real guts of it rather than just a number moving up and down on a on a screen.”

Without that experience it’s easy for traders to get wrong-footed by headline numbers, including large production cuts that are less impressive than they initially sound once existing levels of output are taken into account, he said.

And then there’s the bizarre. On Monday the now-expired NYMEX May West Texas Intermediate crude contract made history by sliding into and settling in negative territory. The May contract traded as low as minus $40 a barrel as traders, unable to find a place to store crude if they were to take physical delivery, paid others to take if off their hands. There was no corresponding move in the underlying physical market, King said, which indicated that there was a “breakdown” in the expiration process.

Read:Why oil prices crashed into negative territory — 4 things investors need to know

Also see:The oil ‘futures market worked to perfection,’ says head of world’s largest exchange of crude’s historic plunge to $0

King said trading the slide has been stressful at times but that the fund has “navigated a few things well.

“Have I been super bearish all the way? No, not really, but there’s been a lot of opportunities that we managed to capture,” he said.

Originally Published on MarketWatch

Home of Science
Follow me

- Advertisement -

Discover

Sponsor

Latest

Rishabh Pant accident: India wicketkeeper to be flown to Mumbai for surgery following car crashon January 4, 2023 at 11:02 am

India wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant will be flown to Mumbai by air ambulance to undergo surgery after being injured in a car crash last week.India...

Jonnie Irwin: Place in the Sun presenter reveals he has terminal canceron November 14, 2022 at 11:50 am

The Place in the Sun and Escape to the Country host has spoken about his diagnosis for the first time.By Paul GlynnEntertainment reporterTV presenter...

Ros Atkins on… Brexit and the clash over EU lawson January 19, 2023 at 10:50 pm

The BBC’s Analysis editor takes a look at the government’s plan to scrap thousands of EU-era laws.The BBC’s Analysis editor takes a look at...

Cardiff riot: Ely death crash witnesses sought by police watchdogon May 26, 2023 at 1:36 pm

The investigation will establish whether the police were in pursuit of the two boys who died.The investigation will establish whether the police were in...

China-Taiwan: Beijing begins biggest military drills around islandon August 4, 2022 at 4:42 am

Taiwan accuses China of trying to change the status quo in the region.Image source, ReutersChina is kicking off its biggest-ever military exercises in the...
Home of Science
Follow me