KONTAN.CO.ID - NEW YORK. Traders desperate to avoid owning oil fled the markets on Monday, sending crude futures into negative territory for the first time ever, in recognition that the coronavirus pandemic has sapped demand for fuel and there is not enough storage for the massive glut of oil present on U.S. soil. Investors sold the May futures contract due to expire on Tuesday in a series of waves. At one point the contract hit negative $ 40. When the trading stopped, crude oil had ended the day at a negative $ 37.63 a barrel, a decline of some 305%, or $ 55.90 a barrel. For as sudden as the day's declines were, it was weeks in the making. The coronavirus pandemic cut fuel demand worldwide by roughly 30% beginning in early March, but for several weeks, the supply of oil worldwide has continued to build. Even the recent deal by OPEC and other major oil-producing countries to reduce supply will not be fast enough, nor large enough, to drain the millions of barrels of unneeded crude present in the markets.
Negative $ 40 oil reflects panic and U.S. crude market economic reality
KONTAN.CO.ID - NEW YORK. Traders desperate to avoid owning oil fled the markets on Monday, sending crude futures into negative territory for the first time ever, in recognition that the coronavirus pandemic has sapped demand for fuel and there is not enough storage for the massive glut of oil present on U.S. soil. Investors sold the May futures contract due to expire on Tuesday in a series of waves. At one point the contract hit negative $ 40. When the trading stopped, crude oil had ended the day at a negative $ 37.63 a barrel, a decline of some 305%, or $ 55.90 a barrel. For as sudden as the day's declines were, it was weeks in the making. The coronavirus pandemic cut fuel demand worldwide by roughly 30% beginning in early March, but for several weeks, the supply of oil worldwide has continued to build. Even the recent deal by OPEC and other major oil-producing countries to reduce supply will not be fast enough, nor large enough, to drain the millions of barrels of unneeded crude present in the markets.