Bytes and barrels: the
origins of oil traders' love of Yahoo
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[July 28, 2016]
By Catherine Ngai
NEW YORK (Reuters) - For the oil
industry, Yahoo Inc's decision this week to sell its core business
to Verizon Communications Inc <VZ.N> for $4.8 billion does not
matter all that much. Their world already changed a few months ago,
when the company said it would jettison its messaging system that
has been the norm for oil traders since the late 1990s.
Back then, Yahoo's technology revolutionized the industry, helping
usher in a new era of high-speed communication that changed the way
millions of barrels of oil traded daily. For Gene Grabinski, who was
trading crude in Chicago for BP Plc <BP.L>, one of the largest
energy companies in the world, it was just the solution needed to
stem the endless flood of phone calls as he bought and sold crude in
the Midwest and U.S. Gulf.
And it came about only because he saw his young daughters using
messaging services back in the late 1990s.
Come Aug. 5, Yahoo is scuttling its legacy instant messaging service
as it seeks to move users to its new Messenger platform, which
traders will not use because it fails to meet the industry's
compliance standards. The announcement was made in June, prior to
the Verizon deal. A company spokeswoman said that Yahoo will focus
efforts on its new system, which will deliver better personal
communication experiences to its users.
For almost two decades, tens of thousands in the oil industry relied
on the old Yahoo Messenger system, which launched in 1998. At that
time, Grabinski was one of just two traders responsible for trading
physical, domestic crude for BP, which owns some of the nation's
biggest refineries including its facility in Whiting, Indiana, and
previously Texas City, Texas.
But Grabinski had a problem. Every day, his phone "looked like a
Christmas tree," he said, with red and green lights blinking as a
flood of brokers called and were put on hold while Grabinski tried
to gather market prices.
After seeing his younger daughters, 11 and 7, use online instant
messaging to chat with friends, he figured he could use the same
system at work at the British major.
"The 11-year-old was on it and we were actively monitoring it at the
time. I was aware of it, but I wasn't really doing it until it came
up and I had the potential to use it in the work context," said
Grabinski, who traded crude for more than a decade at BP starting in
the early 1990s.
EARLY ADOPTERS
It is not clear how Yahoo took the industry by storm, but Grabinski
was part of the first wave of oil traders to use Yahoo instant
messaging, having opened his account just a year after it was
launched. BP was an early adopter of the technology, and several
traders said their use of Yahoo helped spur the industry forward,
even though Yahoo never actively encouraged the trading community to
use its service.
Grabinski - now a senior crude trader at Italian oil company Eni
Trading & Shipping <ENI.MI> - decided on Yahoo because it was newer
than AOL's AIM chat, already used by his counterparts in power and
natural gas trading. He set up a computer screen between himself and
the only other domestic, physical-focused trader at the shop. Using
his account, they communicated with the rest of the market.
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Oil traders work in the pit of the New York Mercantile Exchange in
New York, U.S. on January 12, 2007. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
Slowly, its use became more widespread. Today, everyone from oil traders to
hedge fund managers, pipeline schedulers, brokers, refinery buyers and even ship
brokers uses the chat system globally.
"There's a lot of back and forth, asking other people 'What are you seeing? What
are you hearing?'" said Tariq Zahir, an investment manager at Tyche Capital
Advisors.
FUTURE CHAT OPTIONS
Oil companies are finding various solutions for communication going forward.
Some large players, including Glencore Plc <GLEN.L>, have adopted
Intercontinental Exchange Inc's <ICE.N> chat. ICE said last month that it has
more than 10,000 active users for its messaging system, having grown by 15
percent since January.
Other chat systems include Symphony, CME Group Inc's <CME.O> Pivot chat,
Bloomberg chat, and Thomson Reuters Messenger. Reuters News is a division of
Thomson Reuters Corp <TRI.TO>.
Some have also discussed more widely used mobile options like WhatsApp, Skype or
WeChat, which is popular in Asia.
Grabinski said the transition to a new system should not be a problem.
"Change is part of it, and you kind of just move on," he said. "I don't think
it's going to be that hard. You just type into a little box."
(Reporting by Catherine Ngai; additional reporting by Henning Gloystein and
Florence Tan in Singapore; Editing by David Gaffen and Matthew Lewis)
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