What Does Brent’s Basis Market Tell Us?

The price difference between Brent crude’s spot price and nearby futures contract finished last week at $32, the strongest basis read since at least 2008. Additionally, forward curves for both Brent and WTI show strengthening backwardations meaning commercial interests continue to push the markets to source supplies to meet demand. It is impossible to guess…


What Does Brent’s Basis Market Tell Us?
  1. The price difference between Brent crude’s spot price and nearby futures contract finished last week at $32, the strongest basis read since at least 2008.

  2. Additionally, forward curves for both Brent and WTI show strengthening backwardations meaning commercial interests continue to push the markets to source supplies to meet demand.

  3. It is impossible to guess how high crude oil could go, but when supplies start to move again, the selloff will be volatile.

Late last week I saw a story on CNBC.com with the teaser, โ€œBrent oil spot price for actual cargo soars to $141, highest level since 2008 financial crisisโ€[i]. Three things jumped out at me about this. Letโ€™s talk about them.

First, the 2008 financial. In my discussion with Michelle Rook last week, I mentioned the difference between what we are seeing in the crude oil market today versus what was going on back in 2008. Back then, I appeared on one of the CNBC programs, debating with New York energies trader about over the outlook for the US domestic WTI crude oil market. At the time the spot-month futures contract was in the $130 to $140 per barrel range, with much of the noise focusing on how soon until it rocketed beyond $150, maybe to $200. I didnโ€™t see it that way, making the point the marketโ€™s forward curve was in a strengthening contango (carry for all of you not in New York) meaning fundamentals did not support an extension of the spike rally. This was in the summer of 2008. By the time we had reached the end of December 2008 the spot-month contract had fallen to $35 before extending its break to $33 in January 2009.

Second, this time around, though, the forward curves for both WTI and the global Brent crude markets are showing strong backwardation (inverses), meaning nearby futures contracts are higher priced than deferred issues. When talking about a storable commodity (e.g. Energies, Grains), a forward curve that is in backwardation tells us the marketโ€™s real fundamentals are bullish. Commercial interests are pushing the spot or nearby price in an attempt to source supplies to meet demand. Oddly enough, this also takes me back to 2008 when I traveled to New York to speak at a meeting of energy sector traders and investors in the shadow of the Brooklyn Bridge. One of the other speakers, another analyst, showed a scatter plot chart connecting the marketโ€™s contango (again, at the time) to actual supply and demand.

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