Oil’s Scary Replay: Physical U.S. Crude Could Go Negative In 2 Weeks

 | Apr 28, 2020 11:06

Take note of this date: May 11. By then, if the math is right, the physical price of U.S. crude should be back in negative territory—though I have a hunch it will happen earlier.

As everyone still probably has vivid memories of last week, the collapse of West Texas Intermediate futures to sub-zero levels came after the physical market first slumped to such hitherto unseen prices. 

As of April 14, the physical price of WTI was already at $16 per barrel when futures for May were trading as high as $23. On April 17—five days before expiration—the May contract was still hitting daily highs above $20, while the physical price had already slid to $14.25. 

Of course, over the course of the next 72 hours, everything the U.S. crude market had become known for, as a global benchmark of oil since the early 1980s, disintegrated.  

Oil’s “Black Monday” Set For Rerun/h2

On oil’s “Black Monday,” April 20—the stock market has multiple iterations of black days and it was about time oil got one—May WTI raced down the abyss, matching the physical market’s quote dollar-for-dollar, to minus $40 at one point.