European Tribune

Oil Markets: an Accident Waiting to Happen

by ChrisCook
Thu Sep 18th, 2008 at 07:28:27 PM EST

I just got this article published in the "Asia Times".

An Accident Waiting to Happen

ET regulars will know there's been a lively debate here about whether or not the run up in the oil price to $147 per barrel and back down to the low $90's constituted a "bubble" or  "large volatility".

My view is that sooner or later the oil market will go through a speculative bubble/ large volatility and a rush for "crowded exits" will cause a "market meltdown".

In this article, I am only referring to the problem. I hope shortly to get another article published with a proposal for a market solution.

Anyway, here it is ( I retain the copyright).

The title I provided, and which I prefer, is "An Accident Waiting to Happen".


Oil Market Collapse Waiting to happen
After a phenomenal "spike" in oil prices to US$147 per barrel, the price has declined to just over $90. In the US this led to a "spike" to $4 per gallon of gasoline and placed energy prices right at the top of the US political agenda.

Moreover, this political interest rapidly crossed the Atlantic since British trading of US contracts was believed to be instrumental in a speculative oil market price "bubble".

In view of my background in energy markets - I was for several years director of compliance and market supervision at the International Petroleum Exchange (which is now ICE Futures Europe) - I was asked recently by the British parliament's Treasury Select Committee to give evidence to them in relation to regulation of oil markets. Such an inquiry is a new direction for the committee, and following this initial hearing they decided to commence a full-blown Inquiry - in the finest US tradition - in October.

I told the committee - and their subsequent initial questioning that day of British regulators implied that my message was understood - that to follow the US approach to regulation of oil futures markets would be to try and solve today's problems with yesterday's tools.

The New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil market price has become almost entirely irrelevant in the real world of physical and forward oil trading, which largely takes place, believe it or not, in Yahoo chat rooms. While NYMEX members still provide a massive pool of trading capital or "liquidity", the inconvenient truth is that oil market pricing power has moved across the Atlantic to the price of North Sea crude oil.

Brent benchmark
The price of North Sea (Brent) crude oil is now the direct benchmark for over 60% of global crude oil pricing, and, through the mechanism of massive "arbitrage" trading between Brent and WTI, it also constitutes an indirect benchmark for most of the other 40%.

Most people - including virtually all mainstream press reporters - believe that it is the price of futures contracts that is used as a benchmark. In fact, it is the reported "spot" market price of "dated" Brent/BFOE (see below) cargo transactions that constitutes the direct and indirect benchmark for most global oil transactions. The massively traded ICE Futures Europe Brent/BFOE Crude Oil contract is merely a financial bet on these underlying prices, and these financial contracts are settled in cash, not oil.

For many years, the production of the Brent oil field has been in decline, and the production of other North Sea oil fields has therefore been amalgamated with it to ensure a sufficient number of transactions to give a credible benchmark price.

We now see four fields - Brent, Forties, Oseberg and Ekofisk ("BFOE") - together supplying the BFOE "Brent" contract whereby 600,000 barrel "cargoes" of these qualities of oil may be bought and sold forward for eventual physical delivery.

The problem is that even this extended North Sea BFOE production is still only running at less than 70 cargoes per month, which is a total monthly production of little more than 40 million barrels. Even at $150 per barrel that represents a value of only $6 billion, and at current prices less than $4 billion.

Sitting on this base of physical trading is an off-exchange complex of price risk consisting of the simple forward BFOE contracts themselves, a host of derivative contracts, and an increasing number of "structured finance" transactions. It is estimated that in total, some $260 billion was recently invested in oil markets one way and another, and this pool of funds was superimposed as an inverted pyramid of risk on this relatively tiny base of physical crude oil.

Could these transactions have been instrumental in causing an oil market speculative bubble?

The answer is obvious: of course they could, and in all likelihood, they did. Unfortunately, because the transactions directly affecting the BFOE price took place off-exchange, not only does no regulator know, but none is in a position to know. Worse than that, even if regulators did know, there are no agreed market regulatory standards to enforce, and any offenders are for the most part smugly immune from enforcement action in offshore jurisdictions in any case.

Don't shoot the piano player
As I pointed out to the Treasury select committee, to blame national regulators, such as the FSA in Britain and CFTC in the US, for problems of a global marketplace does not help, other than in providing a useful scapegoat. This is because the problem lies both in the global scope of the market and in its conflicted structure, where the interests of trading intermediaries or middlemen are diametrically opposed to those of end-user producers and consumers of oil and oil products.

In the absence of a new approach to market structure we will inevitably see repeats of the recent spike in oil prices as waves of hot money swill in and out of the market. In my opinion, that will inevitably lead, sooner rather than later, to a market meltdown - similar to the literally overnight collapse of the tin market in 1985 from $800 to $400 per tonne.

The conventional wisdom is that the "central counterparty" clearing houses of futures exchanges, which guarantee the performance of transactions, backed by a pool of capital and margin, are a strength of these markets.

In my view, they also constitute a single point of failure, where oil price risk is concentrated in exactly the same way that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were massively exposed to house price risk.

I made a presentation a couple of years ago in Lausanne to an audience of high-level security experts at a seminar covering the subject of economic terrorism. This fascinating seminar covered the subject of the susceptibility of global markets and commerce to acts aimed at causing economic destruction, rather than physical destruction and death.

I pointed out that current levels of gearing and risk, and the concentration of risk in single points of failure, together mean that the only difference between "economic terrorists" and proprietary traders such as hedge funds is motive. The former would destroy a market deliberately: the latter by accident.

While the oil market survived the recent storm surge of money, the inevitability of future waves of speculative money sweeping into the market, mean that an oil market meltdown is an accident waiting to happen.


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I see speculation wrapped in innuendo surrounded by paranoia.  Exactly how is there to be a meltdown of the sort we're seeing in the financial markets?  Our financial markets are being crushed by an enormous run up in house prices leading to a great deal of speculative building that is now sitting empty.  And to many people living in houses worth less than the debt owed such that the wave of foreclosures is cratering prices leading to the house of cards financing being rapidly pushed back onto people who never thought they had that much risk in hand.

Meanwhile, in the real oil world, 80+ million barrels/day of oil is coming out of the ground and being consumed.  There is no massive stored quantity of oil overhanging the market threatening the viability of new investments for a couple of reasons:

  1.  there hasn't been any huge rush to spend gazillions to produce oil/other energy based on the need for oil at >$100/bbl to break even.  The oilcos did this in the late 70s/early 80s and got stuffed on their North Sea production for quite some time.

  2.  There's no place for a year's worth of oil to be stored unlike having a year+ of vacant housing sitting around waiting for buyers to emerge from the ether.  We've developed a nearly just-in-time system for oil delivery and there's no place to hide a significant stock of oil.

In the  "real" world, all the crude has a home.  Where is there a possibility of collapse?

I see oil as a typical commod market.  When the common wisdom is that there is a likelihood of a shortfall and ever rising prices with little risk of a supply side change hitting the market, prices rise to the point where people are forced to conserve.  Sellers slow walk to the table, buyers clamor and buy a bit extra "just in case".  Classic hoarding coupled with speculative buying keeping the prices up.

We've proven that a doubling/tripling of oil prices doesn't really stop most people from driving in the US.  At most we shaved off demand growth and perhaps a small amount of demand destruction.  There has been very little real production growth for both political and fundamental reasons.

Meanwhile, when we hit a shoulder period where demand is lower and no one is in a panic over supply, the hoarding mechanism reverses and specs move on to greener pastures.  As long as OPEC doesn't trim, prices could go back to $50 if we have a short, warm winter and diesel production leads to massive stock building.

No doubt there is some bad behavior out there.  Always has been and probably always will be.  But lacking any real evidence all you are doing is blaming the bogeyman.

As for Brent driving the bus.  Is BFOE driving or is it WTI?  Regardless, if there was a real market at the consumer level where people actually said FU to the sellers when prices got too high, we'd have a much more rational market.  As long as people just bitch louder at $4/gallon and fill up anyway, price can go anywhere the marginal players wish to take it.

by HiD on Fri Sep 19th, 2008 at 06:31:08 AM EST

Exactly how is there to be a meltdown of the sort we're seeing in the financial markets?

You seem to think I am saying that the market is going to collapse from its current price.

That is not what I am saying at all: I am talking about the systemic risk inherent in this market's structure.

We saw the price go up to $147.00 and back down to $92.00 in pretty short order.

In our last discussion, as I recall, you considered that maybe $25.00 per bbl of the market price was "financial", and I did not disagree with you, because I bow to your superior market knowledge. It didn't stop the market coming off by >$50.00 though, did it?

Whether this represented a "Bubble" or, as Jerome puts it, "large volatility" is a matter of semantics. What we are seeing is huge amounts of speculative money swilling in and out of markets which have a relatively small "free float" of tradable material.

It is only a matter of time before a bubble or "large volatility" happens again, and possibly to a degree, and at a speed, that destroys an energy clearing house - or two.

You see what you think I am saying, not what I actually am saying. I am saying the market is an accident waiting to happen not from a fall from here - your analysis is as convincing as ever - but when a future bubble/ large volatility inflates.


Where is there a possibility of collapse?

I am nowhere saying there is a possibility of a collapse now. If you think I am then please tell me where - other than the title, which as I said in the introduction was not my title, but the one the editor chose to give the article?

If this recent fall in price wasn't a "collapse" then what was it? And if next time twice as much money washes in to the market, might not the possibility of a "collapse" double, and the speed of the collapse increase?

My point is that what happened this time can - and will - happen again, and probably in spades, because there is nothing whatever to prevent it. And next time we may not be so lucky in terms of the speed of the fall.

Moreover, the fact that ICE Futures Europe is taking its clearing away from LCH (where there is more capital spread across several markets) is concentrating the risk further, motivated by ICE Europe's commercial thinking that a vertical "silo" will make them more money.

I see speculation wrapped in innuendo surrounded by paranoia.

I would like to ask you what you see exactly: my questions to you are simple.

Could the market run up again rapidly at some time in the future if speculative money enters the market?

And what will stop it collapsing again when they leave?

by ChrisCook (cojockathotmaildotcom) on Fri Sep 19th, 2008 at 08:18:17 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Could these transactions have been instrumental in causing an oil market speculative bubble?
Given the events of the last 6 months it would seem more appropriate to ask how these prices could have followed that trajectory without there having been those massive flows of money into various commodity investment vehicles.  The retirement funds certainly were never in a position to take actual delivery of crude.  Is there any indication of how so many of these 2008 entrants into commodities futures made out?  How many were able to exit with a profit?  Who were they and how did they operate?

It seems to me that allowing a situation where many times the value of the available product is allowed to flow into futures markets is akin to "naked shorting."  At least "naked shorting" was always a violation of some regulation, even if that regulation was honored more in the breach than in the observance.

If sanity be culturally normative, then by the norms of this culture I claim insanity.

by ARGeezer (argeezer a in a circle yahoo dot com) on Fri Sep 19th, 2008 at 02:53:52 PM EST


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