Understanding Natural Gas Risk Management Spreads & Storage

Energy Educational Homepage

Managing Natural Gas Risk

Calendar spread risk management is one of the key issues in trading natural gas in North America.

Seasons

Natural gas prices show clear seasonality broken into two main seasons: winter, or withdrawal season, and summer, injection season. Winter in the United States generally ranges from November to March; summer is from April to October. During the summer season, gas demand decreases while production continues, resulting in excess natural gas that can be stored. During the winter season, gas consumption peaks as a result of increased heating demand from residential end-users, the industrial sector and utilities. As a result of unpredictable winter demand, winter natural gas futures generally trade at a premium to the summer futures.

Two examples of natural gas calendar spreads could be a summer-winter spread using the averages of the summer and winter months and a March-April spread, when winter demand slows and moves into the summer injection season. Natural gas storage facilities offer physical optionality to balance supply and demand in the gas market. Natural gas providers have the option to inject excessive gas production into underground storage facilities.

Example One

A gas marketer has entered into a contract to sell to a gas utility firm 50,000 MMBtu for December delivery at Henry Hub, Louisiana for a fixed price $3.319 per MMBtu. This marketer decides to hedge his physical volume risk so he buys 50,000 MMBtu from a producer for June delivery at Henry Hub for a fixed price of $3.095 per MMBtu. Essentially, this marketer has bought the June and December calendar spread for $0.224 per MMBtu with long June Natural Gas and short December Natural Gas at Henry Hub.

One approach to balance his price risk is to use a storage facility as a way to move forward his June long position. The marketer injects 50,000 MMBtu gas into the underground storage in June and withdrawals it in December for the sale position with overall storage cost of $0.12 per MMBtu and overall financing cost of $0.10 per MMBtu. As a result, this marketer makes $0.004 per MMBtu after the storage and financing costs.

Example Two

Another alternative approach would be using financial instruments to hedge the calendar spread risk. The marketer sells 50,000 MMBtu or five Henry Hub June futures contracts and buys 50,000 MMBtu or five Henry Hub December futures contracts. With June futures priced at $3.105 and December futures priced at $3.305, this marketer effectively sold the June-December calendar spread for $0.2. Overall this marketer is able to unwind his positions and make $0.224-$0.2=$0.024 profit with financial instruments.

Summary

Calendar spread risk management is a key issue for some participants in the Natural Gas market. We have just demonstrated one way futures could be utilized to manage that risk.

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

Understanding Supply and Demand: Natural Gas

Energy Educational Homepage

Natural gas production in the United States has been rising steadily since 2011. Over 90% of the increase in domestic natural gas production has happened in the seven most prolific shale formation regions, with the largest increases coming from Marcellus. While the states within those shale regions produce the highest volumes of natural gas, there is a broad area of production across the majority of the United States.

Gas storage levels also plays a key role when looking at supply side. Natural gas in storage provides a valuable cushion to meet peak demand. During periods of lower demand, surplus can be injected into storage facilities. The natural gas storage infrastructure can be utilized to accommodate sudden rises or falls in demand, up to a certain point.

Overall, natural gas supply is characterized as being quite responsive to a relatively wide range of prices. However, restrictions of the existing infrastructure impact additional flows, rendering the supply curve very inelastic even when prices are high. On the demand side, overall economic growth, weather and competing fuel prices affect gas demand. Here is a general breakdown of the demand of natural gas across the some of the main sectors.

Demand of Natural Gas

When it comes to electrical power generation, natural gas power burn has been increasing due to low gas prices relative to coal. The second largest sector is within industrial usage. Natural gas is used as raw material to produce fertilizer, chemicals, and hydrogen.

Residential and commercial sector utilize gas as a fuel for heating or cooling purposes. Natural gas suppliers are usually insulated from short-term fluctuations through existing tariffs. The transportation sector accounts for a small amount of natural gas used as vehicle fuel from liquefied natural gas or LNG.

Over the last few years, the United States has seen the development of new LNG exporting terminals, mostly in the gulf coast region. The demand for natural gas for LNG export to international markets is expected to rise significantly.

Natural Gas and Weather

Gas demand has a high price-sensitivity to changes in weather. Weather pattern changes are the primary contributor to gas price volatility. Gas prices also show a clear seasonal pattern with higher prices in fall and winter months in response to higher demand for heating. And lower prices the spring and summer months as demand drops.

Summary

When traders look at the supply and demand for natural gas in the United States, there are a variety of variables that impact the product, distribution, and use of this product throughout the year.

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

 

Managing Risk in the Energy Market

Energy Educational Homepage

Managing Risk in the Energy Market

Like other commodities with wholesale markets, the electricity wholesale market is where electricity is frequently bought and then resold before it ever reaches the end customer. Wholesale participants in this market may not always own resources that generate power and they may not always directly serve the end users.

Three major types of participants engaging in the resale markets include:

Electricity utility companies

Independent power producers

And Electricity marketers

In addition to directly buying or selling in the spot market, companies can also engage in bilateral transactions through negotiation, using a brokerage platform, or through a futures exchange. The transaction could be either a standardized contract like futures or they could be customized, like complex contracts known as structured transactions. In between the wholesale market and the end-customer are the Load Serving Entities (LSE). An LSE can either procure electricity in the wholesale market or they may own their own electricity generation resources.

Options Hedging Example

Assume it is March and the nuclear plant economist has a positive short-term outlook for PJM regional electricity spot price during peak hours for the month of May. The nuclear plant operation costs are $20 dollars per MWh.

Plant’s Goal:

Maximize profit

Eliminate downside risk to fund operations at $20 per MWh

How could the economist take advantage of the potential for a short-term price increase and protect their downside price risk to ensure they have enough funds to maintain continuous operations? 

The economist has two options:

Negotiate a private deal (costly, time consuming,)

Hedge using options on futures (more flexibility, lower costs)

Assume the May average forward price for PJM Western Hub is around $35 dollars per megawatt hour. Given its 1000 MWh capacity and 80% utilization rate in peak hours, this plant needs to sell around 800 MWh for each peak hour during the month of May.

How many contracts would be need to hedge the 800 MWh?

CME Group PJM Western Hub Real-Time Peak Calendar-Month 50 MWh Options Contract (ticker symbol PMA)

800 MWh / 50 MWh = 16 contracts (per day)

16 contracts * 20 days = 320 total contracts

The most straightforward approach for this plant to manage its position, is to sell their generation on the spot market while also going long a May PMA Out-of-the-Money Put, with a $21 strike price.

Strategy:

Sell output at spot physical market

Long OTM Put option at strike $21 per MWh for all peak hours in May

Assuming the current May average forward price for PJM Western Hub is around $35 per MWh, the out-of-the-money put option might only cost $0.3 per MWh to execute.

Scenario 1 Payoff Scenario 2 Payoff
Spot Market in May $40 per MWh $17 per MWh
320 PMA Put Option @ $21 strike per MWh $0.3 per MWh Put Premium Paid

(Option expired worthless)

$0.3 per MWh Put Premium Paid

$21-$17=$4 per MWh profit

(Option was in-the-money)

Net Revenue $40 – $0.3=$39.70 per MWh $17+$4 – $0.3= $20.7 per MWh

 

Futures Hedging Example

Assume it is January, and a utility has a contract to serve their clients in the PJM Western Hub region, for 100 MWh for all the peak hours in the month of June.

How could the utility hedge their price risk in June?

The Utility has three options to hedge their risk:

PJM Spot Market

Bilateral customized transaction

Exchange traded futures

Spot Market

The utility has the option to wait until June to buy electricity from the day-ahead, or real-time, Spot market, which is operated and cleared through the ISO. If they do this, they will be exposed to the price risk between January and June.

Bilateral Agreement

They also have the option to negotiate a bilateral contract with other firms in the wholesale market. But it usually takes time and counterparty risk assessment to be able to execute a customized transaction. Depending on the negotiation, the price this company could get might not be competitive as it is not a market price.

Exchange-Traded Futures

The utility decides to use standardized electricity futures from a futures exchange to hedge its price risk, as it offers the necessary liquidity to meet their needs while eliminating the counterparty risk.

To hedge their risk, the utility uses the PJM Western Hub Peak Calendar-Month Real-Time LMP Futures (L1) provided by CME Group.

Assume there are 20 days of peak days in the month of June, and the futures contract (L1) has a size of 80 MWh. For 100 MW for all the peak hours, this LSE is obligated to 100 MW * 16 peak hours * 20 days = 32,000 MWh. To hedge its price exposure, it buys 400 contracts of L1 June futures at the price of $30 per MWh.

When June comes, the utility buys electricity from the real-time spot market to serve its customers for 100 MW per hour during peak hours.

By the end of June, we might assume the average price of all the peak hours in PJM Western Hub is $40 MWh. Since they bought 400 contracts of L1 June Futures, the profit from the financial futures position will offset the cost from buying in the spot market.

In the end, this utility only pays $30 MWh to serve its customers while the spot market is at $40 MWh. By hedging their price risk using electricity futures, they saved $10 MWh, which equates to $320,000 overall.

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

 

 

Revisiting the WTI-Brent Crude Oil Spread

Energy Educational Homepage

Recent bullish price action in the crude oil markets has many traders revisiting the spread between North Sea Brent and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil. Join CME Group’s Dave Lerman as he analyzes the current state of the two crude benchmarks, including:

How have massive U.S. production changes influenced the Brent-WTI spread?

What impact will tensions in Syria and the Middle East have?

How have U.S. crude exports of WTI impacted this important price differential?

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

 

U.S. Resurgence in Global Crude Oil Production

Energy Educational Homepage

Join Dave Lerman in this special Trader’s Edge installment covering the energy renaissance in the U.S.

On September 12 the Energy Information Administration (EIA) announced that based on currently available estimates of worldwide crude production, the United States recently became the largest producer of crude oil in the world.

Given that a significant amount of oil produced in the U.S. is of the WTI grade (light sweet crude), the ramifications to the producers, users and traders of WTI are significant. See how this could affect WTI trading, including the following points:

As WTI becomes an even greater benchmark, hedgers and speculators are going to pay increasing attention to WTI futures and options across all time zones

U.S. production will no doubt effect the supply and demand equation from crude in an important way, and thus effect its price in the short-, intermediate- and long-term

Spreading WTI versus Brent and other crude products will take on more significance going forward

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

 

Trading Insight for Options on Crude Oil and Natural Gas

Energy Educational Homepage

In this episode of Trader’s Edge, our education experts will look at how low volatility has impacted options trading strategies, particularly around Crude Oil and Natural Gas products.

Two of the most liquid options products in the world, Crude Oil and Natural Gas now show open interest in the millions.

Despite constant headline news about energy price swings, implied volatility remains well below average. See how trading Crude Oil and Natural Gas options could benefit your trading strategy.

f you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

Trading the Curve in Energies

Energy Educational Homepage

The market is always showing early warning signs as to which direction it is heading into. The forward curve or term structure of the markets is one of those signals that offer a considerable amount of information as to the market sentiment and the potential direction of the market.

The term forward curve refers to a series of consecutive month’s prices for future delivery of an asset – like WTI or any of the main energy products traded on NYMEX. The NYMEX futures market (as well as the cleared over the counter markets) trade many months well into the future for the main oil commodities – WTI, Brent, HO, RBOB and Nat Gas.

Let’s start by discussing what the forward curve is and is not. The forward curve is not a price prediction model. The forward curve, or all of the forward months, trade all day long in dynamic patterns. A price along the forward curve does not necessarily mean that will be the price of oil when the market gets to that point in time. Rather it represents what both buyers and sellers agree (via a transaction) that the forward price of oil is that instant in time and subject to change in the next instant.

Thus the term structure or forward curve of the market is in essence a model showing how future months are valued relative to the nearby or spot contract month given all of the available market information at any instant in time. From an activity viewpoint, the majority of the activity, and thus liquidity, tends to be in the front to the forward curve with the far back months mostly following.

The shape of the forward curve is important to energy market participants. The forward curve or term structure of the forward market is looking at prices from many different maturities as they extend into the future. The curve trades in three different structures depending on market conditions. The least common configuration is a flat forward curve or when all prices going forward basically are mostly equal to each other. This represents a market that has no conviction with buyers and sellers indifferent as to the direction of the market. Rarely does the energy market trade in a flat formation.

I will use the following NYMEX HO forward curve (based on settlement prices for 6/6/14) to point out the two dominant structures that the forward curve generally trades in -backwardation and contango.

Source: NYMEX ULSD Data on 6/6/2014

The front part of the HO forward curve (July, 14 to Jan, 15) shows the curve structure in a contango – sometimes called a carry formation. A contango formation occurs when prices are higher in succeeding delivery months than the nearby or spot months. Generally a contango forms when the market is over-supplied (and/or demand is low). The market does not need all of the oil being produced (in the above case, HO) and the oil over and above what is needed generally winds up in inventory. Thus during periods of contango inventories generally build.

The back end of the above curve is in a backwardation (Jan, 15 through Dec, 15). A backwardation is a structure that suggests the market is undersupplied and/or demand is outstripping supply. In the above example it is the time of the year when demand for heating oil rises as a result of the winter weather or a period when normal supply flows cannot keep up with demand. It is during a period of backwardation in the market that inventories are normally depleted as an additional source of supply to meet demand.

The following forward curve of the NYMEX Nat Gas contract shows a similar pattern to the above HO curve.

Source: NYMEX Natural Gas Data on 6/6/2014

The front end of the curve moves into a mild contango starting with the Oct, 14 contract and into a backwardation during the heart of the winter heating season beginning with the Jan, 15 contract.  Both the HO and Nat Gas contracts move into contango and backwardation on a seasonal basis. Both commodities are over produced during the summer season while demand outstrips demand during the winter heating season. The degree of contango and backwardation are very fundamentally driven. If supply strongly outstrips demand the contango will get very wide and vice versa during periods of demand strongly outstripping supply – like during periods of much colder than normal winter weather (similar to the winter of 2013/14 in the US).

The WTI forward curve is less seasonal and primarily dependent on both US domestic and international crude oil supply and demand balances. The WTI forward curve based on 6/6/14 settlement prices is shown below.

Source: NYMEX WTI Data on 6/6/2014

This particular curve is in a backwardation throughout its entire forward period suggesting that demand is outstripping supply. Even though this is the forward curve for a US based crude oil that in early June of 2014 is oversupplied the crude oil market is internationally based. Events around the world insofar as supply and demand, impact WTI as well as the Brent marker crude oil. The world of oil in 2014 is still being impacted by various geopolitical events in several oil producing countries (i.e. Libya, Iran, and Iraq) that has resulted in a reduction in crude oil exports from these countries offsetting the surplus of crude oil that has formed into the US and thus the term structure in a backwardation.

Some of the key takeaways from the forward curves are as follows:

  • The shape of the forward curve is primarily driven by fundamentals.
  • The fundamentals or the relationship between supply and demand at any point in time will push the term structure into a contango or backwardation.
  • When a market is in a backwardation demand is generally outstripping supply and thus prices in the front end of the market will generally be supported and have limited downside until the market moves back in balance.
  • On the other end, when a market is in contango supply is outstripping demand and thus prices in the front end of the market will generally be sold into  and have a downside bias until the market moves back in balance.
  • The fundamentals that drive the shape of the forward curve can be driven by seasonal conditions i.e. winter heating season or by other reasons that impact the supply and demand. Some of these reasons are:
    • Geopolitical risk to supply in producing countries.
    • Weather related impact to supply i.e. natural disasters like hurricanes.
    • Normal operating impact to supply like refinery and producing maintenance schedules.
    • Unscheduled downturns in the refining sector resulting in under producing various refined products.
    • Economic growth that results in a growth spurt for energy products.
    • Above or below normal weather related demand for heating fuels like HO and Nat Gas.

The above is an overview of the term structure of several of the key energy commodities traded on the NYMEX futures market.

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

 

Crude Oil Futures versus ETFs

Energy Educational Homepage

There are many approaches investors can take when building their portfolios. Two of those choices are futures contracts and Exchange Traded Funds, or ETFs.

Access Physical Markets

One major reason traders use these products is to gain access to physical markets, like gold or oil.

In the crude oil market, managed money customers usually do not own assets or engage in the underlying physical market to trade, store and deliver physical crude oil. Physical market participation requires significant infrastructure investment in oil production, storage tanks and pipeline distribution facilities. The same challenge applies to other physical markets as well.

To gain direct crude oil market exposure, investors can trade WTI futures contracts, which are physically-delivered light sweet crude oil from the Cushing, Oklahoma hub. WTI futures is the international benchmark for crude oil prices, increasingly so with U.S. production growth and the lift on the crude oil export ban.

Futures versus ETFs

Some advantages of futures over ETFs include: 

No management fees

Roughly 24-hour trading access; when overnight market events, such as elections or weather, impact oil prices, there is no delay before you can trade – unlike waiting for ETF open.

Many oil or energy ETFs use futures to provide market exposure; whereas trading NYMEX WTI futures gives you direct access

When NYMEX WTI futures roll approaches, oil ETFs often lose some of their correlation to the underlying market, which can inflate your costs due to slippage.

Energy ETFs

The two popular crude oil ETFs are the United States 12 Month Oil Fund (USL) and the United States Oil Fund (USO). Both ETFs are issued by the United States Commodity Fund, LLC but represent a different underlying futures exposure.

USO

The USO is designed to track the price movements of the WTI futures spot month contract. If the front month contract is within two weeks of expiration, the positions on the front month contract will be rolled over to the second front contract.

USO has different WTI exposure than the WTI front month futures contract because of its roll over schedule. Since the USO rolls over its front month contract two weeks before it expires, it is in fact exposing approximately half of its price exposure to the second front month contract price.

Historically, the USO performance deviates slightly from the WTI front month contracts. Even though the USO tries its best to mimic the front month WTI price, performance also deviates from WTI spot prices due to roll yield, transaction costs and management fees.

USL

The USL is designed to track price movements of the rolling average of NYMEX WTI futures 12-month forward contracts.

The front month contract position is rolled over to the 12-month forward contracts, constantly maintaining an average price exposure of the rolling 12 consecutive months.

Conclusion

Investors need to be aware of the differences between futures and ETFs so they can decide what works best for them.

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

 

Understanding the Oil Data Report

Energy Educational Homepage

There is no underestimating the importance of oil prices on the underlying health of the economy. As oil prices move up or down, inflation follows in the same direction. Energy from oil is used for everything from heat to manufacturing to transportation, therefore if oil costs rise, so do the costs of many consumer products and the overall cost of living. In times of high oil prices, the Federal Reserve (Fed) may even adjust interest rates to prevent further inflation. This is just one sign of the fundamental interrelation between oil and the overall U.S. economy.

Even with the rise of algorithmic and quantitative trading, the basic principle of supply and demand is always key to understanding the movement of oil prices. When monitoring supply, energy traders pay particular attention to the weekly U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) Petroleum Status Report, which reports on U.S. crude oil inventories, both domestically and abroad. This report is released by EIA each Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. Eastern Time.

Traders also consult the American Petroleum Institute (API) Weekly Statistical Bulletin Report, released on Tuesdays at 4:30 p.m. Eastern Time. This report covers U.S. Crude inventories and data related to refinery operations, as well as the production, imports and inventories of the four major petroleum products: motor gasoline, kerosene jet fuel, distillate fuel oil and residual fuel oil.

Additionally, the weekly Baker Hughes Rig Count, which reports on total U.S. oil rigs, may provide an indication of future oil production and inventories in the U.S.

While these weekly releases provide essential data points for understanding current U.S. oil supplies, traders must also pay attention to international politics and policy. In the Middle East, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), regularly meets to exercise control over production quotas and oil prices. Since OPEC controls 60% of the world’s oil, OPEC policy changes can heavily impact global oil supply and demand.

One major difficulty when analysing the outlook for energy markets is that supply and demand are impacted by many diverse factors, including geo-political tensions, seasonal elements such as winter heat and summer driving, refinery outages and world events both in the U.S. and abroad.

For this reason, many successful oil traders maintain an in-depth knowledge of political issues in oil-producing regions, as well as a strong technical understanding of the refining process. On the other hand, inventory updates by the API and the EIA requires considerably less analysis. In essence, if the EIA number shows a higher-than-expected increase in crude supply inventories, it implies greater supply strength and can be bearish for crude prices.  Likewise, a reported weaker-than-expected supply can imply a stronger demand.

There are a number of factors to think about when trading U.S. oil data but with a little insight and thorough preparation, these markets provide numerous opportunities for traders.

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure

 

Introduction to European Crude Oil

Energy Educational Homepage

The North Sea in the 1970s and 1980s offered stable government, good access to markets and good financing opportunities. For these reasons, the crude oil benchmark, Brent crude, developed in this region.

Brent crude was adopted by producers in Russia, North and West Africa, and in Asia in the early 2000s. The physical market is dominated by the trading in a forward market that enables users to trade monthly oil cargoes for three to four months ahead.

Forward trades are either full-size North Sea crude cargoes of 600,000 barrels or smaller, 100,000 barrel partials that are cash-settled unless the same buyer and seller trade six partials in the same delivery month.

The Brent Spot Market

There is an established mechanism for moving from the forward to the physical market.

A producer agrees a month-ahead forward contract with a refiner for a specific contract month.

The field operator of one of the specified fields announces the loading dates month-ahead before the month starts to be wet.

Equity producers can either start nominating their cargoes or they can keep them. When a buyer is passed a cargo, they can choose to keep it or pass it along, creating a chain with whomever they have a month-ahead contract with.

If the cargo is nominated on-time the buyers must accept the cargo offered. Once the deadline for nominating a cargo has passed, the cargo turns physical and it can then be traded as dated Brent cargo as precise loading dates will be attached to that cargo.

The spot, or physical, market for Brent is called Dated Brent, referencing the value of spot cargoes trading in the North Sea. Several different crude grades underpin Dated, which vary in quality and price. An adjustment mechanism enables these grades to be assessed to a standardised specification in term of quality.

The cheapest of the underlying grades is used to determine the value for Dated Brent. Dated Brent is widely used by both the upstream and downstream, as well as the broader energy industry. Prices are also used by some of the relevant tax authorities in the calculation of the tax reference prices used by the industry.

The Development of Futures for the North Sea

With the forward market already developed and successfully trading, the futures market, was a logical next step in Brent’s evolution.

Based on the activity in the forward Brent market, the futures markets developed in the late 1980s. Today, they are a major price benchmark reference for European oil trade. Futures facilitate trading further down the curve with contracts listed in months for up to 10 years ahead.

There is a wide range of market participants in the futures market, from commercial energy firms, to traders, to financial participants. This makes the Brent futures market a significant price discovery tool, available for trading 23-hours-per-day.

Brent futures are cash-settled against an index price that is based on the trading of cargoes in the forward Brent market. The Brent market also offers monthly financial-based contracts based on the underlying futures market.

Sitting alongside the cash and dated structures are a series of financial-based derivative contracts facilitating the hedging of both short-term and long-term crude oil markets.

The Wider Brent Derivative Markets

There are a series of financial-based contracts available to successfully manage short-term and long-term risk in the North Sea.

At the near-term end, there are weekly Contracts for Difference (CFDs), which allow you to manage exposure to the Dated Brent price for a specific week, or set of weeks, up to 12 weeks ahead.

Monthly contracts and financial-based futures based on the underlying futures market, are also listed to help you hedge exposure to Dated Brent.

Brent’s Physical Supply Base

The underlying crude grades, which underpin the Brent market, are Brent, Forties, Oseberg, Ekofisk and Troll (deliverable from January 2018). Production in these crudes has fallen over the years, and quality differences between each grade means that adjustments had to be made to compensate participants if they accepted or delivered a different quality crude oil. Outside of these main benchmark crudes, the other producing regions are in the UK and Norwegian North Sea, as well as offshore Denmark and the Netherlands.

Production costs for the main oil producers in Europe tend to be high when compared to other regions. Supply has fallen from a 2002 peak of around 6 million barrels per day and the 2016 volume was around 3 million barrels per day, as shown in the chart below.

New discoveries of oil deposits were made, but these tend to be smaller than in other parts of the world. Some upstream operators turned their attention to other regions where the reserve base is typically higher and cheaper to extract. Niche upstream operators in the North Sea are used to drilling for oil in areas that are difficult to extract from and have had some successes for future production, especially in the Norwegian oil sector.

Source: JODI (Joint Organisations Data Initiative)

European crudes are most commonly stored and refined locally within the European market, but some cargoes are exported outside the region to countries in Asia. Some of the crudes are transferred into storage in the Asia region or are sold directly to refiners in the region.

The spread between Brent and the Asia benchmark, Dubai, are used to support this trade. Similarly, U.S. crudes that are exported to Asia or Europe can be traded using two benchmarks, the WTI and Brent. Liquidity is high on both spreads and these are active markets listed for trading on the exchanges. The WTI-Brent spread has been very volatile in the recent past, and with U.S. exports being permitted, the spread is likely to represent a true reflection of the arbitrage economics from the U.S. Similar parallels could be drawn for the WTI-Asian crude spreads where there were several exported cargoes to refiners in the region.

Hedge Example – Using Dated Brent

A North Sea oil producer agreed to a six-month supply deal of 1 million barrels per month with an oil refiner. The pricing basis for the contract is the monthly average of Dated Brent + a premium of $0.75 cents per barrel for each shipment.

The producer is looking to fix the sales price to the refiner for the next six months to protect from the downside impact of falling prices.

The breakeven cost for the producer is $48.00 per barrel so a price level higher than this would see the producer generating a profit. The current price for the next six months is averaging $49.50 per barrel.

The producer is a natural long in the physical market and is therefore exposed to a fall in prices. To protect against this risk, the producer is looking to hedge their forward price exposure in the futures market. For the producer to be fully hedged in the market, they would take a short position in the futures market to align with a natural long position in the physical market. The diagram below shows what a hedged position would look like for the producer.

The price of Brent crude is averaging $49.50 per barrel over the next six months, as determined by trading activity in the futures market. If the price falls below the $48 per barrel breakeven cost, the producer would be running their production at a loss and would potentially face a reduction in output. Or they would supply crude at a loss to the refiner.

The producer faces two choices: exposure to the market price or hedging its production and selling forward the price of crude oil for the next six months.

By achieving a hedge price of at least $48 per barrel for each delivery month, the producer can provide cash flow certainty and maintain all its supply commitments.

What Instrument Would be Used for the Hedge?

The Brent Dated to Frontline futures contract covers the price differential between the daily price of Platts Dated Brent and the futures settlement for the financial Brent futures contract for that day. Therefore, using a hedge combination of the DFL for each delivery month plus the financial Brent futures price for each delivery month would be an effective way to hedge.

Hedge formulae

The Dated to Frontline futures (DFL) price for September + the Brent Financial price for September = a September flat price Dated Brent value for September delivery. The formulae can be modified to generate a monthly Dated Brent price for each delivery month.

We can consider two possible scenarios over six months: either the spot price increases from $48 to $52, or it falls back down to $45. There was a negotiated differential to the spot price of 75 cents per barrel, which was built into the price. In both cases, the producer can achieve stable margins of $2.75 when using the monthly futures as a hedge:

If you have any questions send a message or contact me

Regards,
Peter Knight Advisor

—————————————————————-

Privacy Notice

Disclosure