Oil prices skid on oversupply, storage concerns
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[April 27, 2020] By
Noah Browning
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices fell on
Monday on concerns about scarce storage capacity and global economic
doldrums from the coronavirus pandemic.
U.S. oil futures led losses, falling by more than $2 a barrel on fears
that storage at Cushing, Oklahoma, could reach full capacity soon.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate <CLc1> June futures fell $2.86, or 16.88%,
to $14.08 a barrel by 1100 GMT.
Brent crude <LCOc1> was down 83 cents, or 3.9%, at $20.61 a barrel. The
June Brent contract expires on Thursday.
Oil futures marked their third straight week of losses last week - and
have fallen for eight of the past nine - with Brent ending down 24% and
WTI off around 7%.
The June WTI contract's price fall may have been partly triggered by
investors moving to later months after the May contract lapsed into
negative territory for the first time ever before expiring last week.
The front-month contract was trading at lower-than-usual volumes.
"The market is very concerned of a repeat of negative pricing as the
Cushing storage and delivery hub saturates," Harry Tchilinguirian,
global oil strategist at BNP Paribas in London, told the Reuters Global
Oil Forum.
"The shift of open interest away from June will have negative
consequences for the liquidity of the contract, potentially leading to
greater volatility in its price," he added.
U.S. crude inventories rose to 518.6 million barrels in the week to
April 17, near an all-time record of 535 million barrels set in 2017.
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An oil pump jack pumps oil in a field near Calgary, Alberta, Canada
on July 21, 2014. REUTERS/Todd Korol
Cushing, the delivery point for WTI, was 70% full as of mid-April, although
traders said all available space was already leased.
Global economic output is expected to contract by 2% this year, worse than the
financial crisis, while demand has collapsed 30% due to the pandemic.
In the United States, a record 26.5 million Americans have filed for
unemployment benefits since mid-March, and the Congressional Budget Office
predicted that the economy would contract by nearly 40% annually in the second
quarter.
"The current oil balance is simply awful, and no improvement is anticipated
until after June due to massive fall in global oil demand," said oil broker
PVM's Tamas Varga.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies including
Russia, a group known as OPEC+, pledged this month to cut output by an
unprecedented 9.7 million barrels per day in May and June.
Kuwait and Azerbaijan are coordinating oil output cuts, while Russia is set to
reduce its western seaborne exports by half in May.
(Additional reporting by Florence Tan in Singapore and David Gaffen in New York;
editing by Richard Pullin and Jason Neely)
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