Heavy night-time volumes crush Shanghai oil futures
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[March 28, 2018]
By Josephine Mason and Chen Aizhu
BEIJING (Reuters) - Shanghai crude oil
futures <0#ISC:> slumped on Wednesday, the third day of trading since
their launch, after heavy selling overnight, as traders scrambled to
follow cues from the main international markets.
The big volumes done in the late evening in China underscore the
complexity of trading the new contract when London's Brent <0#LCO:> and
WTI in the United States <0#CL:>, are in full swing, with Shanghai's
relatively low liquidity exaggerating the price swings.
In the first two hours of the night session, which started at 2100
Beijing time (1300 GMT) on Tuesday and marks the beginning of a new
trading day, prices sank 4.2 percent to 408.6 yuan ($65.09) per barrel.
Over 34,000 lots of 1,000 barrels each of Shanghai crude changed hands
in that time, more than half the turnover for the day.
The price drop was much steeper than those seen in Europe and the United
States, where prices were down under 1 percent after data showed a
surprising rise in U.S. crude inventories.
It was all the more jarring for many traders in China who rushed to
catch up with the overnight action on Wednesday morning as Shanghai's
second session was starting at 9 a.m.
That highlighted concerns among many traders about the set-up of the
contract, with the exchange splitting trading into three slots
punctuated by long breaks, while Brent and WTI keep trading.
"It's early days for Shanghai crude exchange. Long-term, it should have
a good potential, but it would probably be good if opening hours were
extended," said Oystein Berentsen, director for crude oil trading at
Strong Petroleum in Singapore, which specialises in China's oil markets.
(Graphic: Night owls in Shanghai crude oil - https://reut.rs/2pNo3Fp)
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Workers are seen on an offshore oil platform surrounded by icy
waters in Liaodong bay off Liaoning province, China January 18,
2018. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
It was not immediately clear what caused the hefty drop, although some traders
said it was due to a stronger yuan. A stronger yuan would make investing in the
contract for holders of other currencies more expensive.
Other traders said the U.S. storage data also hurt sentiment.
But the relatively low open interest, which measures contracts that have yet to
be settled, caused big gyrations. On Wednesday, September open interest was
6,074 lots. The exchange counts both sides of the trade, which means it was
actually 3,037 lots.
That compares with half a million lots for Brent.
"Given the limited liquidity and also the perception that the (Chinese) national
oil companies are on the sell side, short-sellers were emboldened," said a
Beijing-based trader with a western trading house. "We are talking about only
thousands of lots of open interest, not hundreds of thousands, that got people
worried that deliveries would be an issue."
Selling continued through the morning and afternoon sessions, with the contract
falling almost 3 percent to a final settlement price of 414.1 yuan ($65.86) a
barrel.
Turnover was 67,198 lots, equal to 33.6 million barrels of crude. In the first
two days of trading, volume each day was around 40,000 lots.
($1 = 6.2880 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Josephine Mason and Chen Aizhu; additional reporting by Henning
Gloystein in SINGAPORE; Editing by Richard Pullin, Tom Hogue and Aaron Sheldrick)
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