Booming Oil Exports Boost U.S. Role as Global Price Maker
Trades
of key Texas-crude contracts hit record high
The world’s
oil traders are increasingly adopting an old slogan as they track crude
prices and try to shield themselves from volatility:
Don’t mess with Texas.
Traders
swapped contracts for oil sold in Houston and Midland, key hubs of the Texas export
boom, at a record clip on Feb. 8, according to exchange giant CME Group
increase; green up pointing
triangle. By Monday, the number of outstanding agreements
for such crude deliveries sat at a record high.
The surge
in activity reflects how U.S. crude exports increasingly shape global oil prices,
as well as the financial instruments bought and sold by producers, refiners and
traders to avoid or capitalize on price swings. In June, a Texas-produced crude
will be formally added to the Brent complex, the global benchmark.
A spurt
in U.S. crude production over the past decade accelerated the shift, pushing exports
to new heights. Following the
Kremlin’s invasion of Ukraine, Western
sanctions
on Russian energy cemented the trend by making
Europe more reliant on U.S. shipments.
Taken
together, analysts say, the changes in physical and financial markets mean the cost
of driving cars, shipping
freight or flying
jets increasingly relies on what happens along
the U.S. Gulf Coast.
West
Texas Intermediate crude, or WTI, “has become the most important marginal pricing
barrel on the globe,” said Peter Keavey, CME Group’s global
head of energy and environmental products.
In 2015,
Washington reversed decades-old limits on crude exports after innovations in drilling
technology tapped gushers of fossil fuels from U.S. shale regions. Producers in
the epicenter of the boom, the Permian Basin,
have since shuttled more output to international markets through a network of pipelines
connected to ports in Houston and Corpus Christi, Texas.
Crude
exports hit a record of 5.1 million barrels a day the week that ended Oct. 21, according
to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, a roughly 10-fold increase since
President Barack Obama signed a bill opening the door to such shipments.
As traders
loaded more tankers with U.S. crude deliveries to foreign buyers, related derivatives
have grown more central to limiting risks including war, pandemic and recession
that have upended energy markets in recent years. Futures contracts, agreements
for deliveries months or years in the future, are paramount to such hedging strategies.
In 2023
across CME Group markets, investors’ daily trading of WTI contracts tied to Houston
and Midland has roughly doubled from the same period a year earlier. That uptick
culminated Feb. 8 when the pair of agreements changed hands 57,302 times.
As of
Monday, CME said, a record 361,285 of those contracts remained unsettled, representing
attempts by producers, refiners and traders to limit risk in the future.
Analysts
say the derivatives allow producers and traders to more precisely hedge before exports
hit the water in the Gulf of Mexico. Those agreements are priced as differentials
to WTI futures of blended crude delivered to a pipeline junction in Cushing, Okla.,
a more widely traded contract seen as the domestic benchmark price.
The growth
in crude tanker trips to Europe also threatened to make a closely watched global
benchmark less representative of real-world trading. For years, five types of crude
produced between the U.K. and Norway have traded into the Brent complex, which Wall
Street views as a bellwether for international prices. But the region’s production
tapered in recent years.
The price-reporting
agency Platts responded by considering new streams of crude to add to the basket
to better represent physical trading and limit volatility. U.S. crude from Midland
won out over oil from the Johan Sverdrup field off the Norwegian coast, largely
because its light, sweet makeup more closely matched other crudes in the North Sea.
“The
European refinery market loves that stuff,” said Dave Ernsberger,
head of market reporting and trading solutions at S&P Global Commodity Insights,
which owns Platts. “The Chinese refinery market loves that stuff.”
The cost
of such U.S. crude delivered to Europe will begin to be reflected in Platts’ price
assessments for Brent in June.
Already,
traders are swapping a new futures contract Intercontinental Exchange
pegged to the price of Midland-quality crude when it reaches the Gulf Coast. There
are more than 16,000 of such outstanding agreements, according to ICE, equivalent
to about 16 million barrels of oil.
“This
is the rebirth of U.S. oil as the driving force of global oil price,” Mr. Ernsberger said.