The global oil market is running out of options: ‘You cannot print molecules’

The global oil market is running out of options to keep prices from rising to new heights, experts say, with physical deadlines quickly approaching. Since Iran began disrupting transit through the Strait of Hormuz shortly after the US and Israel began an airstrike campaign in late February, the global oil market has lost roughly 1…


The global oil market is running out of options: ‘You cannot print molecules’

The global oil market is running out of options to keep prices from rising to new heights, experts say, with physical deadlines quickly approaching.

Since Iran began disrupting transit through the Strait of Hormuz shortly after the US and Israel began an airstrike campaign in late February, the global oil market has lost roughly 1 billion barrels of oil, per IEA data.

Even with pipelines running through Saudi Arabia and the UAE to reroute oil around the waterway, the market continues to lose an additional 14 million barrels a day while the strait is closed, according to data from JPMorgan. Yet prices have remained contained around $100 per barrel as investors look for quick resolution.

โ€œThe market is taking very seriously that the diplomatic process is going to be the eventual outcome, and that flows are going to resume,โ€ Rebecca Babin, senior energy trader at CIBC Private Wealth, told Yahoo Finance.

โ€œWeโ€™re pricing flows that we hope will be coming in a month, but we havenโ€™t really seen that uptick yet,โ€ she said.

Commercial inventories of both crude oil and refined products, including petroleum, gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel, have all plummeted globally as stores have been expended with no backfill.

To backfill those losses, the IEA coordinated the release of 400 million barrels of oil from member countriesโ€™ strategic reserves early in the war. Governments and private-sector companies around the world have steadily drawn down their inventories. But there are hard limits to how low oil inventories โ€” which cannot be effectively backfilled due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz โ€” can go before the global oil system hits operational minimums.

Read more:ย How oil price shocks ripple through your wallet, from gas to groceries

Storage tanks with floating roofs that sit on top of the oil, which make up most of the onshore storage capacity, must be at least 20% full to operate, according to Goldman Sachs research. Pipelines must have oil along their entire length to maintain operations, and refineries canโ€™t fall much below 65% of their capacity without operationally degrading and losing money.

Even if oil movement through the Strait of Hormuz were to begin normalizing, the oil market is likely to reach the lowest global storage levels on record since 2018, when satellite data largely became available to track global stocks, per Goldman Sachs.

โ€œIf no flows start resuming by the end of June, we will be hitting those inventory levels that flash red lights where weโ€™re kind of tipping into that inflection point where operations may be impacted,โ€ Babin told Yahoo Finance. โ€œSo this month that weโ€™re looking at here is extremely critical in terms of the market thinking that those flows will resume and we will avoid that outcome.โ€œ

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