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WEF: Pressure in WTI trading could mount again

Oil&Gas Materials 21 April 2020 17:05 (UTC +04:00)
WEF: Pressure in WTI trading could mount again

BAKU, Azerbaijan, Apr.21

By Leman Zeynalova – Trend:

Pressure in the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil trading could mount again, Pedro Gomez, Head of Oil and Gas at the World Economic Forum said, Trend reports.

“The oil and gas market took an unprecedented turn on April 20th when we saw the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil traded at negative prices – producers were actually paying buyers to take their barrels. A compound disruption of storage capacity constraints, COVID-19 related hit on short-term demand, uncertainty about long-term demand, additional barrels in the market and the particularities of how oil is traded (today is the final trading day of WTI futures contracts for physical delivery in May) are some of the key factors that led to this situation,” he said.

Gomez noted that although today WTI is no longer traded in the “red territory”, the pressure could mount again when the June physical delivery trading window pushes to the end.

“The current market context is exerting tremendous pressure across the oil and gas industry and those companies with higher break-even prices and smaller balance sheets are more exposed,” noted the expert.

He said this situation does not only affect companies, but many countries and their populations.

“For exporting countries (particularly in the developing world), oil and gas-related revenue funds all sort of activities, including health. Without a steady flow of petrodollars, governments of these nations could find that addressing the health emergency created by COVID-19 will be even more challenging. Consuming countries could see this as windfall but nations where petrol consumption is heavily taxed at the pump will see state coffers impacted. A further question in the minds of many is how the current oil and gas crisis will impact energy transition plans. While it is difficult to say how long the demand slump will last, it poses challenging questions to the near term trajectory of the global energy transition,” Gomez concluded.

West Texas Intermediate oil futures expiring in May traded as low as negative $16.74 a barrel on Tuesday, up from Monday's close of negative $37.63.

That selling pressure seeped into WTI crude contracts for June, which fell as much as 42 percent to $11.89 a barrel. Brent crude slid 29 percent to $18.10 at intrasession lows.

Crude oil for May delivery remained in negative territory on Tuesday, a day after hitting its lowest-ever level. The contract traded positive at one point before heading lower again.

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Follow the author on Twitter: @Lyaman_Zeyn

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