Mexico goes ghost as its oil hedge bill spirals
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[January 23, 2020] By
Stefanie Eschenbacher and Devika Krishna Kumar
MEXICO CITY/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Mexico is
playing a risky game of hide and seek with the oil market.
To frustrate speculators and contain an annual bill of more than $1
billion, Mexico is going to new lengths to mask its attempts to insure
its revenue from oil sales against falling prices - no mean feat for a
hedging program known as Wall Street's biggest oil trade.
Getting the hedge right is crucial for Mexico as it offers stability at
a time the government is planning to boost social welfare and security
spending, the economy is stagnating and the country's credit-worthiness
is under intense scrutiny.
Once an enigmatic agreement between a handful of finance industry
officials and Wall Street banks, the hedge is now the most anticipated
deal in the oil futures market, making it harder, and more costly, for
Mexico to arrange.
For its 2020 hedge, however, Mexico has adopted a different strategy
than in previous years, according to a Wall Street source with direct
knowledge of the deal.
This time, an estimated two-thirds of the options Mexico bought in
financial markets were indexed to the international Brent crude
benchmark, shifting away from the Maya oil Mexico mainly produces,
according to the source.
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By using such a heavily traded contract as Brent, Mexico should have
been able to cut costs by getting lower quotes for its trades and to
place bets more unobtrusively to avoid prices shifting ahead of its
moves, market sources said.
But critics say the strategy creates new risks. By using international
oil contracts based on a different kind of oil, the structure of the
hedge may not fully reflect Mexico's export mix dominated by Maya, which
is typically cheaper than Brent.
SWEET OR SOUR
"I would expect a divergence of prices over the long term. This pressure
on Maya could move prices down faster than its hedge. This would cause a
loss on the physical sale of Maya and minimal-to-possibly no benefit of
the hedge," said Ryan Dusek, director at consulting firm Opportune LLP
https://opportune.com based in Houston, who added that the trade could
end up being "worthless."
The Mexican finance ministry declined to comment on the structure of the
hedge.
The Wall Street source said the proportion of Maya crude hedged for 2020
was significantly lower than in previous years.
For the 2009 deal, for example, Barclays, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs
and Morgan Stanley hedged 305 million barrels of crude using Maya and
only 25 million with Brent, data obtained by Reuters through a freedom
of information request showed.
The Wall Street source said for 2020, Mexico had bought put options on
Brent on the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) at $54-$56 a barrel and
hedged Maya at $42.
Brent <LCOc1> is trading at around $63 a barrel while Maya's official
selling price for deliveries to the U.S. Gulf Coast is about $55,
according to S&P Global Platts pricing data.
The options give Mexico the right to sell oil at the predetermined
price, so if the actual market price is lower, the options pay out and
make up the difference - acting effectively as an insurance policy.
But if the price of Maya, a heavy sour crude, falls faster than Brent, a
light sweet crude - or Maya drops and Brent rises - Mexico could miss
out on oil revenues without the hedge kicking in, analysts and market
sources said.
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Mexico has had to contend with the potential divergence in Maya and
Brent crude prices before but the risk is now greater as demand for
heavy crudes globally is expected to slump.
Reuters was unable to determine whether Mexico has taken additional
steps to bridge any gaps between Maya and Brent.
'HACIENDA HEDGE'
Mere rumors of Mexico's "Hacienda hedge," which gets its name from the
country's finance ministry, can shift prices ahead of its anticipated
deals and the government fears participants push up premiums when they
suspect Mexico is about to trade.
"Banks have become much better at accumulating information about it,"
said Victor Gomez, a former Mexican finance ministry official involved
in the hedge until 2018.
In part due to this, the hedge's cost has increased 10-fold in peso
terms since 2001, even though the number of barrels hedged has barely
changed, the data obtained from the freedom of information request
showed.
Mexico spent the equivalent of $212 million to hedge 200 million barrels
in 2001 but in 2016, hedging 212 million barrels cost $956 million. In
2017, Mexico stopped disclosing the number of barrels it has hedged.
Now, for the first time in at least 19 years, finance ministry officials
have declined to reveal how much they're spending to protect 2020
revenue, saying the information would give speculators insight into
their strategy and raise costs.
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Tanks holding fuel of state-owned company Petroleos Mexicanos (PEMEX)
are seen at a storage facility, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico October 4,
2017. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez/File Photo
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"What we don't want is that they identify the moments that Mexico goes to the
market, because that raises the costs of the premium," Gabriel Yorio, one of the
main architects of the hedge under President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who
took office a year ago, told reporters this month.
The cost of the hedge has also risen because the peso has declined versus the
U.S. dollar and because options have become more expensive since many
commodity-oriented funds, which were natural counterparties to the deal, have
closed.
Officials have also declined to say how much of the 1.73 million barrels a day
it produces they're protecting, nor to what extent they're using put options or
a budget stabilization fund to guarantee government revenue.
All they have disclosed is that the 2020 hedge guarantees an average price for
Maya of $49 a barrel.
(Graphic: Mexico oil hedge -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/editorcharts/MEXICO-OIL-HEDGE/0H001QEEL6ZW/eikon.png)
Since 2001, Mexico has received three payouts up until the end of last year: in
2009, 2015 and 2016, the data showed.
Nevertheless, those three payments were so large the finance ministry could
argue it was still ahead - at least before including the cost of the 2020
program.
Mexico has also taken other steps to cover its tracks. In response to further
questions in Reuters' records request, Mexico's transparency institute said
additional information about the hedge had been sealed for five years.
It cited the finance ministry as saying revealing details could increase costs,
affect Mexico's monetary policy and financial stability and create systemic
financial risk.
"This is part of Mexico's strategy to leave banks and oil majors in the dark
about what they are buying and how much they are paying," said Gomez.
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Asked about specifics at a news conference on Jan. 9, Mexican official Yorio
highlighted the importance of the overhaul of the crude oil pricing formulas
that underpin Mexico's oil exports.
Last year, Mexico changed the pricing formula for Maya sales to the U.S. Gulf
Coast to be based 65% on U.S. West Texas Intermediate in Houston - a light sweet
crude which is the most traded U.S. Gulf Coast grade - and 35% on Brent futures.
Before, it had been derived from West Texas Sour, Dated Brent and other grades
that have become less traded markets. The formula also previously included fuel
oil rich in sulphur, which has been hit by new rules requiring ships to use
cleaner fuel.
FUND OR OPTIONS
Mexican officials involved in the hedge in the past said the government may be
considering increasing its use of the stabilization fund to guarantee oil prices
as a supplement to financial instruments.
From the mid-2010s, Mexico started to lock in part of its target oil price with
the fund to contain the costs of the options it buys from banks and major oil
companies.
For example, Mexico locked in a price of $79 for its 2015 hedge, with $76.40
guaranteed by options and the remaining $2.60 backed by the fund. In 2017, the
last time the ministry released such information, $4 of its $42 hedge was
covered by the fund.
Gomez and Julio Ruiz, another former official involved in the hedge until 2018,
said Mexico was expected to expand this strategy in the coming years but
cautioned it would struggle to keep enough money in the fund to hedge oil
exports fully.
"They would have to accumulate a larger amount of resources in this fund," Gomez
said.
Nevertheless, those changes would do little to ease the concerns of some who
believe Mexico spends too much on the hedge, said Ruiz, adding that guaranteeing
oil revenue was still necessary given the pressures on Mexico and state-owned
Pemex, the world's most heavily indebted oil company.
"In congress, many will say they don't agree with how this money is spent, and
that it shouldn't be spent on the oil hedging program," Ruiz said.
"But Mexico's finances would become a lot more volatile without it."
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(Reporting by Stefanie Eschenbacher in Mexico City and Devika Krishna Kumar in
New York; Additional reporting by Ana Isabel Martinez and David Alire Garcia;
Editing by David Gaffen, Frank Jack Daniel and David Clarke)
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