‘Uncharted Territory’: Energy Analysts Worry Oil Prices Could Fall Below Zero, Forcing Producers To Radical Measures

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Analysts worry Saudi Arabia, Russia and other oil-producing nations’ deal curbing oil production might not prevent crude prices from falling below zero, putting the market in uncharted territory.

President Donald Trump played a big role in getting Russia and the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to drop output, bringing production to 9.7 million barrels a day in May. Still, energy analysts believe the prices are unlikely to recover in the short run.

Oil markets experienced a double whammy since March as officials deploy lockdowns to confront coronavirus.

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Prices plunged into the $30s in March as the Saudis pushed for a cut in output to prop up prices, while Russia worked to infuse the market with hundreds of thousands of barrels of oil. Saudi Arabia relented and moved to increase output, kicking off a prolonged sell-off that roiled global markets.

In some areas, the price is in single digits.

The price of Western Canadian Select —which is typically transported via pipeline — tumbled to a little more than $8 a barrel on April 1, according to S&P Global Platts, while the price of West Texas Intermediate fell to just above $10 a barrel at the end of March. Even worse, a firm that sells commodities reportedly bid less than zero dollars for Wyoming Asphalt Sour crude.

“The current downturn is harsh, but probably not the worst ever, especially if the global economy rebounds as many expect,” energy economist Philip Verleger told The Wall Street Journal Wednesday. “We haven’t seen a demand shock like this in 90 years.” He noted that the current crackdown is every bit as painful as that of the Great Depression but in a shorter period of time.

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Traders and analysts say the move to curtail production won’t be enough to compensate for the loss in demand as Americans stay at home, leaving airplanes and cars idle in garages and hangers across the U.S.

“It’s not nearly enough to make a significant shift in balancing the market,” Chris Midgley, global head of S&P Global Platts Analytics, told TheWSJ Wednesday.

Other analysts expressed similar sentiments as traders wait and see when the economy will come back.

“Since humans started using oil, we have never seen anything like this,” Saad Rahim, chief economist at Trafigura Group Pte. Ltd., told TheWSJ. “There is no guide we are following. This is uncharted.”

Rahim’s company estimates demand for oil is at 65 million to 70 million barrels a day, significantly down from the 100 million barrels the global economy typically consumes each day.

Meanwhile, the Department of Energy announced Tuesday that it is willing to provide space within the Nation’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve to store excess crude oil. The DOE is negotiating with unnamed oil companies on contracts to hold about 23 million barrels of crude oil storage in reserve.

“Providing our storage for these U.S. companies will help alleviate some of the stress on the American energy industry and its incredible workforce,” DOE Secretary Dan Brouillette said in a press statement.

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