Sunday, May 31, 2009

Strong Asian Demand; ICE Brent Hedging/Trading

In the course of the last couple weeks we’ve seen several new highs for the year, and Friday was no exception. Closing out the week on the back of increasing pressure from the gasoline market, a spiralling (lower) dollar and a rally in equities, crude markets ended the month of May with gains of upwards of 30%. Economic data is the predominant catalyst pushing energy markets higher, and it is Asia that appears to be leading the charge in this respect. Industrial Production results for Asia during the month of April were surprisingly optimistic, highlighting the strength of the hoped for and much-discussed Asian recovery. This is no more apparent than in China where motor-vehicle sales and increased Ethylene production (related to Naptha demand) reveal a boosted oil demand picture.

After last week’s archetypal production meeting, Opec decided not to adjust announced output levels while also stating they expect higher near-term prices in the range of $75-80. According to the CFTC, crude longs increased by more than 9,000 contracts last week to 187k while speculative net longs also increased approximately 8% to 101.6k. On further moves higher, aside from psychological resistance at $70, expect significant selling pressure from profit-takers around $71.85.

Implied volatility has decreased substantially across the entire feedstock and product complex. Despite soft At-The-Money vols, the put skew remains elevated in crude markets, thus allowing consumer hedgers to own relatively better priced upside protection by selling inflated-priced puts for financing. For instance, the ICE Brent APO 2H09 $80 call can be owned for zero cost by selling the $57.50 put in the same tenor. Similarly, the ICE Brent APO 2H09 $80 call can be owned for zero cost when the $50/60.50 put spread is sold. This position results in unlimited upside protection/gains above $80 with only limited loss potential on the downside ($10.50/month).

Singapore