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Insight - Wall Street is going to take oil out to a wild party
2022-01-20 00:00:00.0     星报-商业     原网页

       

       SUPPLY and demand fundamentals drive oil prices. Things like the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies (Opec+) production plans and United States driving patterns matter the most – until they don’t.

       That’s when the wizardry of Wall Street takes over, giving prices a push up or down beyond what the physical fundamentals warrant.

       The oil market is on the cusp of one of those moments.

       For the last 18 months or so, bullish oil traders had been accumulating huge numbers of contracts that give them the right to buy crude at a particular price and time – call options, in the industry’s jargon.

       They’ve bought thousands of those contracts pegged to US$100 (RM419.60), US$105 (RM440.58), US$110 (RM461.56), US$125 (RM524.50) and even US$150 (RM629.40) a barrel.

       For many, they were akin to lottery tickets: a cheap way to bet on surging prices in the future.

       At the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, the contracts sold for almost nothing. With lockdowns in place and energy demand weak, the likelihood of oil prices surging to triple-digit levels looked freakish.

       A year ago, one could buy a US$100-a-barrel (RM419.60) call option for December 2022 for just 24 US cents (RM1) a barrel. Fast forward to today: That lottery ticket is worth US$4.2 (RM17.62) per barrel.

       There were even cheaper tickets: The December 2022 call option for US$125 (RM524.50) a barrel sold for as little a 9 US cents (RM0.38) a year ago. Today, it’s worth nearly 15 times more: US$1.35 (RM5.66) a barrel.

       Despite the price surge, few are selling their call options just yet. Instead, many hedge funds and other large investors are patiently awaiting a much bigger prize: for oil prices to rise further so they can exercise their call options in full and enjoy the right to buy crude below its market price.

       That’s when Wall Street comes to play, with the kind of frenzy that can be deeply addictive or terrifying depending on your tolerance for risk – or how you feel about speculation and commodity prices.

       It’ll also prod the White House, and every other government, already fretting about surging inflation, to panic because higher oil prices mean much higher gasoline prices.

       The statistic Wall Street has its eye on is Brent crude, the global benchmark for oil prices. On Tuesday, it hit a seven-year high of US$88.66 (RM372.02) a barrel. That increase has been mainly the result of supply and demand.

       Omicron hasn’t hit consumption as much as feared; meanwhile, Opec+ is struggling to raise supply, with many countries, including giants like Russia, failing to add extra barrels in December. Oil inventories have continued to shrink throughout mid-January, defying expectations of an oversupplied market.

       At below US$90 (RM377.64) a barrel, the oil market has been dominated by the opposite of a call option – a put, which tends to encourage selling from some participants.

       But once the price hits US$90 (RM377.64) and higher, there’s a sea change in the put-to-call ratio because lots of the calls traders accumulated on the cheap will mature – with a concentration around the June and December contracts.

       The wizardry of the options market then takes over.

       Wrong side of trade

       As prices rise toward the value of the call options contracts, the banks that sold the lottery tickets will find themselves on the wrong side of a trade. They are, in all but name, short in a rising market. So they need to protect themselves, and the only way to do so is going long by buying futures.

       As they do, they risk creating a catch-22 situation: Oil prices rise, banks buy more futures, which trigger further price rises, which commands more buying.

       It is a situation called gamma, in the jargon of the options market.

       The oil market has faced similar conditions before, both to the upside and downside.

       “If we break above US$90 (RM377.64) a barrel, things will probably get spicy,” said Thibaut Remoundos, founder of Commodities Trading Corp Ltd, which advises oil consumers and producers on options strategies.

       “As we rise above US$95 (RM398.62) and higher, the options market is set up to be a strong tailwind for the bulls.”

       Of course, Wall Street alone cannot move the market without strong fundamentals. It’s been the physical market that’s gotten prices this close to US$90 (RM377.64). And there may be a bit of a pause in February and March: It’s the time of year when some refiners undergo annual maintenance and crude demand drops. Prices may consolidate.

       But then they’ll turn higher. By April, the physical oil market should be stronger while inventories remain very low, particularly when measured by the number of days of forward demand. That combination could potentially push prices to the level where the options market becomes the place where a lot of money is made.

       Over the last month, the number of outstanding contracts, or open interest, for the Brent US$100-a-barrel (RM419.60) call option for June 2022 has surged almost 140%, as traders bought more and more lottery tickets.

       And that’s just what’s visible on the exchange. In the opaque over-the-counter market, where traders change contracts among themselves directly, volumes could be much higher.

       If all the stars align, the oil traders, who have held onto their options patiently for months, may finally win the jackpot. — Bloomberg

       Javier Blas is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering energy and commodities. The views expressed here are the writer’s own.

       


标签:综合
关键词: market     barrel     traders     options     contracts     oil prices     RM377    
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