Skip to content

New Covenant Network News

Articles For The Kingdom Age

  • Durham’s Treatment Of Clinton Camp Contrasts With Mueller’s Treatment Of Trump Camp News
  • Tiger Global Craters 15% In April, Bringing YTD Loss To Record 44% As Melvin Capital’s Implosion Continues News
  • FOMC: More Room For Hawkish Than Dovish Surprises News
  • White House refuses comment on evidence Hillary spied on Trump News
  • WATCH: Viral video shows conservative student confronted over trans views News
  • Roman Abramovich’s $1 Billion Five-Yacht Fleet Exposed News
  • Nancy Pelosi dodges question about midterm elections Christian/Secular news
  • Putin: Destined To Hang Or Drown? News

"A Recession Is Necessary" To Lower Demand As 'Real Economy' Routed By Soaring Fuel Prices

Posted on May 9, 2022May 9, 2022 By Tyler Durden
Spread the love

“A Recession Is Necessary” To Lower Demand As ‘Real Economy’ Routed By Soaring Fuel Prices

Authored by Javier Blas, op-ed via Bloomberg.com,

Sorry, But for You, Oil Trades at $250 a Barrel

The culprit is the refinery margin and the consequences are huge for global inflation…

If you are the owner of an oil refinery, then crude is trading happily just a little above $110 a barrel – expensive, but not extortionate. If you aren’t an oil baron, I have bad news: it’s as if oil is trading somewhere between $150 and $275 a barrel.

The oil market is projecting a false sense of stability when it comes to energy inflation. Instead, the real economy is suffering a much stronger price shock than it appears, because fuel prices are rising much faster than crude, and that matters for monetary policy.

Petroleum Shock

Refined oil products have risen between 30% and nearly 140% since Russia invaded Ukraine in late February, compared to less than 15% for crude.

Source: Bloomberg

To understand why, let’s examine the guts of the oil market: the refining industry. 

Wall Street closely monitors the price of crude, particularly a grade called West Texas Intermediate traded in New York. It’s a benchmark followed by everyone, from bond investors to central bankers. But only oil refiners buy crude — and therefore, are exposed to its price. The rest of us — the real economy — purchase refined petroleum products like gasoline, diesel and jet-fuel that we can use to run cars, trucks and airplanes. It’s those post-refinery prices that matter to us. 

Typically, the price of crude and the price of refined products go up and down in tandem, almost symmetrically. What’s in between is a refining margin. In normal times, WTI is a handy price shorthand for the entirety of the petroleum market. So when, say, U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell looks at WTI, he gets a neat picture of the whole energy market. 

But we aren’t in normal times. Right now, the traditional relationship between crude and refined products is broken. WTI is anchored around $100-$110 a barrel, suggesting that — in barrel terms — gasoline, diesel and jet-fuel prices shouldn’t be much higher, once you add the average refining margin. 

In reality, they are a lot more expensive. Take jet-fuel: in New York harbor, a key hub, it’s changing hands at the equivalent to $275 per barrel. Diesel isn’t far away, at about $175 a barrel. And gasoline is at about $155 a barrel. Those are wholesale prices, before you add taxes and marketing margins. 

What’s changed? Refining margins have exploded. And that means energy inflation is far stronger than it appears. 

Oil refineries are complex machines, capable of processing multiple streams of crude into dozens of different petroleum products. For simplicity’s sake, the industry measures refining margins using a rough calculation called the “3-2-1 crack spread”: for every three barrels of WTI crude oil the refinery processes, it makes two barrels of gasoline and one barrel of distillate fuel like diesel and jet-fuel. 

Cracking Profits

Oil refiners are enjoying the best ever processing margins, lifting the cost of fuels such as gasoline, diesel and jet-fuel well above that of crude

Source: Bloomberg

Note: WTI 3-2-1 cracking margin

From 1985 to 2021, the crack spread averaged about $10.50 a barrel. Even between 2004 and 2008, during the so-called golden age of refining, the crack spread never surpassed $30. It rarely spent more than a few weeks above $20. Last week, however, the margin jumped to a record high of nearly $55. Crack margins for diesel and other petroleum products surged much higher. 

There are four main reasons behind the explosion in refining margins. 

First, demand — particularly for diesel —  has rebounded strongly, depleting global inventories.

In some markets, like the U.S. East Coast, diesel stocks have fallen to a 30-year low. Despite rising prices and fears of an economic slowdown later this year, oil executive say they see strong consumption for now.

“Demand is not that easily destroyed,” Shell Plc Chief Executive Officer Ben van Beurden told investors last week.

Second, the U.S. and its allies have tapped their strategic petroleum reserves to cap the rally in oil prices.

That has provided extra crude, which has put a lid on WTI prices, but it hasn’t addressed the tightness in refined products.

Only a small fraction of the emergency release is in the form of refined products, and only in Europe. 

Third, and perhaps most importantly, refining capacity has declined where it matters for the market now, and the plants that are operating are struggling to process enough crude to satisfy the demand for fuel. 

Martijn Rats, an oil analyst at Morgan Stanley, estimates that outside China and the Middle East, oil distillation capacity fell by 1.9 million barrels a day from the end of 2019 to today — that’s the largest decline in 30 years.

The downward trend started well before the pandemic hit, as old Western refineries struggled to compete, environmental regulations increased costs and the unfounded fear of peak oil demand amid the energy transition prompted some companies to close plants. The fuel-demand collapse triggered by Covid-19 only turbo-charged the trend, resulting in dozens of refinery operations shutting down for good in Europe and the U.S. in 2020 and 2021. New capacity has emerged in China. However, Beijing tightly controls how much fuel its refiners can export so that capacity is effectively out of reach of the global market. 

“Has the oil market hit the refinery wall?,” Rats asked in a note to clients last week. “Unusually, the answer appears to be yes.”

Fourth, are the sanctions and unilateral embargos — also known as self-sanctions — on Russian oil.

Before the invasion of Ukraine, Russia was a major exporter not just of crude, but also of diesel and semi-processed oil that Western refiners turned into fuel. Europe, in particular, relied on Russian refineries for a significant chunk of its diesel imports. The flow has now dried.

Europe not only needs to find extra crude to produce the diesel and other fuels it’s not buying from Russia, but, crucially, it needs the refining capacity to do so, too. It’s a double blow. Oil traders estimate that Russia has shut down 1.3 million to 1.5 million barrels a day of refining capacity as result of the self-sanctions. 

Who’s benefiting? The pure-play oil refiners, which are quietly enjoying record-high profit margins. While OPEC and Big Oil get the blame, independent refiners are cashing-in. The sky-high crack margins explains why the share prices of U.S. refining giants Marathon Petroleum Corp. and Valero Energy Corp. have surged to all-time highs.

The longer the refiners make super-profits, the harder the energy shock will hit the economy. The only solution is to lower demand. For that, however, a recession will be necessary. 

Tyler Durden
Mon, 05/09/2022 – 10:27
Source: Zero Hedge News

 98 total views,  1 views today

News

Post navigation

Previous Post: Pandemic Spurs Florida's Rightward Tilt, Population Growth
Next Post: Russian TV Hacked to Display Anti-War Message

Related Posts

  • Trump: Jan. 6 Panel's 'Sole Goal' Is to Stop Me From Running News
  • Democrats (and Some Republicans) Are Pushing to Fully Legitimize Marijuana News
  • Symptoms of Sudden Liver Disease Outbreak in Kids News
  • Democrats Function As Putin’s Climate Stooges While He Uses Oil To Wage War News
  • Analysis: Biden Losing Ground Among Young Voters News
  • Survey: Most Agencies Expect to Meet Zero Trust Requirements News

Help Keep NCN Going – Could You Spare $5.00?

THIS WEEK'S 10 MOST READ ARTICLES

  • Africa's Way Out of Monetary Colonialism 3 views per day
  • Trump Touts His Endorsements, Slams 'Low-Rated Political Shows' 3 views per day
  • In Early Primaries, Voters Favor Polling Places Over Mail 3 views per day
  • Dr. Scott Gottlieb: 'Being in an Airplane Is Safe'; Mandate Can Be Lifted 3 views per day
  • Ransomware Gang Says it Has Hacked 49ers Football Team 2 views per day
  • Medical Institutions Ignore The Obvious Damage Mask Mandates Are Doing To Children’s Language Development 2 views per day
  • Rabo: Nobody Knows What The US Would Do In A Chemical Weapons Situation 2 views per day
  • Twitter Board Adopts "Poison Pill" To Thwart Musk Takeover, Exposing Itself To "Titanic" Legal Liability 2 views per day
  • Vaccinated people with mental health issues more likely to suffer breakthrough COVID infection 2 views per day
  • Report Finds Identity Fraud Up 167% In USPS Change Of Address Requests 2 views per day

Our Authors & Blogs

Visit Our Sister Site

Visit Live By Truth for classic New Covenant Podcasts

Visit Preterist Archives

Preterist Archives

Visit This Site

On Demand

Recent Posts

  • Laguna Woods mass shooting – Geneva Presbyterian Church rampage slammed by CA Governor Newsom after suspect’s arrest
  • Buffalo mass shooting LIVE news – New York victims named & Governor Kathy Hochul slams Twitch over Payton Gendron vid
  • Biden Push To Turn 'Ultra MAGA' Into Disparaging Epithet Came From 6-Month Study, Was Not 'Organic'
  • Teen charged after boy killed near Millennium Park ‘Bean;’ Mayor Lightfoot enacts weekend curfew – WLS-TV
  • Visualizing The Science Behind Cultured Meat
  • Van Hollen says he suffered stroke
  • Biden: Time to 'Fund the Police'
  • China Economy Crashes Worse Than Expected Amid Covid Lockdowns
  • "The Price Is Wrong": Morgan Stanley Says Bear Market Won't Be Over Until One Of Two Things Happens
  • Poll: Americans Increasingly Believe Trans Identity Acceptance Has Gone Too Far

Archives

  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • May 2019

Categories

  • Bible Prophecy Questions
  • Christian Blog
  • Christian/Secular news
  • Congress
  • Doomsday News
  • Health
  • iTunes
  • Mel Gibson
  • News
  • Opinion
  • The Other Journal
  • Uncategorized
  • Video
  • Worthy News

Help Us Continue

  • Justice Barrett's Neighbor to Protesters: 'Go Home and Get a Family' News
  • In Leaks About Failed Russian Diplomacy, Biden Exposed Dangerous Weakness On China News
  • ‘Triple-jabbed’ Barack Obama tests positive for COVID-19 Health
  • Biden Reverses Nord Stream 2 Pipeline Waiver, Reverts To Trump's Sanction Policy News
  • Nightmare Scenario: Operational Miscalculations Could Trigger Nuclear War News
  • Rabobank: The Fed's Gloves Comes Off As China Throws In The Towel News
  • A Plethora Of New Macro Trends News
  • 10 Signs The War In Ukraine Is Part Of The Great Reset News

Copyright © 2022 New Covenant Network News.

Powered by PressBook News WordPress theme