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World News See other World News Articles Title: Sorry, Diesel Prices Are Likely To Climb Again Soon By Rachel Premack of FreightWaves For todays MODES, I called up FreightWaves Editor-at-Large John Kingston to find out what the heck is happening with diesel prices recently. I learned a lot, but the most important takeaway was the World Oil Market Waterbed Theory. FREIGHTWAVES: Just to start off pretty broad, the macro conditions are pretty much the same from what we saw earlier this year to whats happening now. Obviously, we havent built any new refineries in the past few months. Theres still a war in Ukraine. Why is it that future prices are going down, and maybe not as quickly, but retail gasoline and diesel prices are also going down? KINGSTON: Its a good question because its not really clear. I think part of the reason is that the news reports continue to trickle out about Russia doing relatively well in finding new buyers for its crude oil. Whereas, the International Energy Agency had predicted a couple of months ago that the loss of Russian supplies was going to be about 3 million barrels a day, which is roughly about 3% of the world market which is a lot when you lose that much supply. Im going to date myself with this reference, but its the best I can do. The world oil market is like a waterbed. If you push down one corner of the waterbed, the water moves throughout the entire mattress. If Russia is actually finding buyers for its oil that maybe had gone to Europe previously, but the oil is instead going to India or China, its the same as it getting out to its normal places. The world oil market is better supplied than it looked like it was going to be starting back around March or April. I think thats very clearly a factor. Why diesel prices likely will rise again KINGSTON: When you look at what refineries are doing right now, they are running just full blast. One of the reasons, of course, is that the margins have been so strong. They are putting a lot of products onto the market, but lets look forward a little bit, and Im going to refer to the earnings call for Phillips 66. The executive vice president for marketing and commercial is a guy named Brian Mandell. He was talking about diesel and he said, Yeah, its down, but lets look at a couple of things. Global inventories are still extremely tight. Its summer, which is not the heavy diesel season. But as he said, Were getting near harvest season, and harvest season is important for diesel consumption for obvious reasons, and then right after that is winter. Hes cautious about the idea that weve got some great drop in diesel markets as a result of various factors. Now, the question becomes, as we move ahead, does the price of crude rise overall? Does diesel drag up crude? There are times in oil market history where that most certainly happened. Or does diesel just strengthen against crude? Looking at a very basic spread of the first month of the Brent crude price versus the price of ultra-low sulfur diesel on the market, it got up as high as $1.64 per gallon on May 2. [Tuesday], it was down about 58 cents. Its been trending consistently. Over the last two weeks, its been about in the 40-to-50 cents range. A year ago, the spread was 40 cents. OK, its starting back toward normalcy, but its still elevated and its coming off some amazingly high numbers. Europes natural gas crisis could mean a higher diesel prices in the U.S. KINGSTON: Going forward, as we go toward the winter, we really have to watch whether youll see crude go up on its own. Will diesel drag up crude with it? Or will diesel just move higher than crude? The world of diesel needs to look very closely at what happens with the whole Russian natural gas situation. When you dont have enough natural gas, you inevitably turn to diesel or some kind of distillate as a substitute, whether it is for an industrial process [or] whether its to generate electricity, diesel can be a substitute for natural gas. If the Russians really put the squeeze on Europe with natural gas, youll probably see buyers turn to distillate, whether its a pure diesel or some other distillate product, in its place. Thats very concerning. Obviously, theres always a risk of a gas-for-oil substitution or oil-for-gas substitution, but its really high now, really strong. The pain at the pump shall continue. (Jim Allen/FreightWaves) FREIGHTWAVES: What would that substitution do to the price of diesel, for example? KINGSTON: If youve got demand for energy out there thats right now satisfied by natural gas, and instead thats not available and they turn to diesel, thats a new source of demand for diesel. FREIGHTWAVES: Diesel obviously has come down in price quite a bit in the past few weeks, but you dont seem quite so certain that were out of the woods quite yet. KINGSTON: No. Really the reason I say that is primarily because of inventories. Theyre so low. Heres how to determine diesel prices on the futures market, if thats something you were hoping to do KINGSTON: Theres no one price of diesel on the futures market. Theres a price now for September. Theres a price for October. Theres a price for September 2023. It goes out several years, and that spread is not a prediction of where the price is going to be. It is a complex mix, a complex brew of inventories and interest rates. A market that is in perfect balance, the kind of thing they teach you in econ 101, that a market will rise over time. The September commodity is X. In that perfectly balanced market, October will be X plus something. That something is a function really of the cost of storage and the cost of money, the time value of money. When markets get very, very tight, like they are now, the market shifts into a structure known as backwardation. In backwardation, its X for the first month, X minus something for the next month, X minus something even more for the next month after that. The reason is because with supply short, you absolutely want the front-month barrel. You want the most immediate supply right now. The diesel market is in eye-popping backwardation right now. Its not quite as crazy as it was. The highest number Ive got here was $1.19 for the 12-month backwardation, meaning the front month versus 12 months out. Ive got one number that got out to $2.14. I mean, its just nuts. Right now, its about 50 cents. A year ago on Aug. 3, the 12-month curve was 7 cents. FREIGHTWAVES: These are some crazy numbers, for sure. KINGSTON: It wasnt backwardation. The markets been a little tight for a while, but if you go back to as recently as April of last year, the market was in the structure known as contango. Thats what I talked about before, where the price goes up every month, and thats usually a sign of a fairly well-supplied market. This really steep backwardation in the market, yes, it continues to have me concerned because the market doesnt. How to turn crude into diesel (a new hobby?) FREIGHTWAVES: How does the diesel refining world compare to the tightness weve been seeing on the gasoline refining side? And as a secondary question to that, is there a certain type of crude that refineries prefer when it comes to refining diesel versus refining gasoline? KINGSTON: Every grade of crude performs differently in a refinery. For a real refinery, their model will show that crude type X will yield, in their particular refinery, a small percentage of LPGs (liquefied petroleum gases), like butane and propane, a small percentage of naphtha and a small percentage of intermediate products that we dont really recognize. They know exactly what type of crudes will do particularly well to make diesel or to make gasoline. If the markets right, theyll look to make heavy fuel oil. Theyve tended not to try to do that in recent years, but they will try to maximize their output. They cant do it precisely. Its not like you can plug in numbers and say, OK, Id like to get 35.1% diesel out of this crude oil. The fact of the matter is, its tough for any crude to yield more than 40% diesel. Thats your maximum. As the world looks to consume more diesel, relative to gasoline, if that is in fact the way were going, thats a problem. You cannot stand in front of a refinery and demand that it produce nothing but diesel because we dont want gasoline right now. Youre always going to get some. This imprecision is why we import and export products because some refineries have more diesel than their system needs. Some refineries have more gasoline. Some markets need more diesel than their local refiners produce, so its easier to import it rather than to bring it into the U.S. [or] rather than to bring it from somewhere else in the U.S. Refineries are amazingly complex products, but they are not perfect. Theyre only so precise.You do get these imbalances, and the imbalances can only really be met by importing or exporting. Truck stops have seen unprecedented profits from high diesel prices but its not as sinister as it may appear FREIGHTWAVES: I want to talk a little bit more about what you mentioned before I turned on the recorder about this idea that truck stops are making so much money right now, so much profit off of diesel and the fact that retail diesel prices have been so much higher than wholesale. Why is it that the decline in diesel prices havent been keeping up with wholesale prices? A skeptical reader is going to see that and think, OK, these truck stops are just trying to profit off of us. Whats going on behind the scenes? KINGSTON: The way the market works is that theres futures trading. It builds up in four steps. Im going to oversimplify here. Theres future trading, A, and then B, there is physical trading in individual markets (such as the Gulf Coast, the Atlantic Coast and New York Harbor). It might be traded as, in the Gulf Coast, ULSD minus 3 cents one day, then minus three and a half cents the next day, whatever. Then, those spot market prices are used as the basis for setting wholesale prices. Wholesale prices serve as the basis for what the retailers pay. Then, theres the retail prices, which are set by the individual station owner, not the oil companies. When the market shoots up rapidly, as it has done, obviously, over the past several months, the wholesale prices shoot up with it. Wholesale will track futures prices pretty closely. Not necessarily one for one but pretty close to one to one. When those prices shoot up, its difficult for the retailers to keep up. Theyre a little nervous about going up all the way, because what if the guy across the street, maybe hes not going to go up all the way and then Im going to lose business. Its real street combat. Similarly, when the prices are up there and the wholesale numbers start coming down rapidly, as theyve done now for really a month, theyre going to hold on to those prices as long as they can. Now, as soon as the guy across the street says, I think I can grab some market share. I got a new, cheaper load from my supplier, and I think I can grab some market share from that jerk across the street by lowering my prices and then Ill get more people who are going to come into my convenience store and buy beef jerky and all this other stuff, then the guy across the street has to go too. He has to move too. Its always going to be slower because its probably just a natural economic resistance to lowering your price. One international shipping regulation is quietly pushing up diesel prices KINGSTON: In 2019, in the oil market and at FreightWaves, we were writing quite a bit about IMO 2020. IMO 2020 is the worldwide regulation that went into effect that required all ships to burn fuel with no more than 0.5% sulfur. This was significantly restrictive. One of the ways that the marine fuel market was going to get there was to produce a new product called very-low-sulfur fuel oil, VLSFO. Thats a product that really didnt exist before. The way that they were going to make it is that they were going to use a lot of something called vacuum gas oil. Vacuum gas oil is an intermediate product that comes off the crude tower, which is the first thing you do in a refinery. You throw crude into the crude tower, you get all these intermediate products and then you further process them into final products. The problem is that vacuum gas oil tends to go into making diesel. The fear was always that you were going to divert VGO into making marine VLSFO. This is a whole new source of demand. You were going to tighten up the diesel market in the process. There were some signs in the fall of 2019 that maybe the diesel market was starting to tighten up. There was a view out there that maybe this was the early signs of IMO 2020. IMO 2020 goes into effect on Jan. 1, 2020. By March 1, the worlds in a full-blown pandemic. Demand craters, and the test of the theories of the diesel market tightening because of IMO 2020 never really got tested because demand had collapsed. Now, of course, demand has come roaring back, and there are some views out there that one of the reasons youre seeing such strength in the diesel market is because of IMO 2020. It just didnt announce itself on a single day the way its supposed to do the first time. FREIGHTWAVES: Thats a potential under-the-radar driver of the tightness in diesel right now, it seems. KINGSTON: I mean, lets just say that it wasnt under the radar in 2019. Everybody talked about it. Diesel inventory remains low, and scheduled refinery turnarounds wont help boost stores FREIGHTWAVES: What will it take to restock diesel inventories? KINGSTON: Its hard to say because refineries have been running on full blast now for a while. Just in the U.S. over the last four weeks, the utilization has been between 94.5% and 95%, which is a really healthy number. Its dropped a little bit since then. Were coming up to whats known as turnaround season, where you have regularly scheduled maintenance. They have turnarounds in September and October to get ready for winter and then they do turnarounds. They dont turnaround every refinery, but then therell be turnarounds, lets say, in March and April getting ready for summer. We were at 95% on the week of June 24. Were down to 92.2%. Were getting toward the fall, where its inevitably going to slide. The refining margins are not as great as they were a few weeks ago. Theyre still healthy, but theyre not as good. That creates a little less incentive to produce a lot of product. Inventories can turn around relatively quickly with a change in conditions, but youd have to have a lot of new supply, margins that really incentivize price, and a drop in demand. Otherwise, its going to take a little while to get inventory back, and I still think thats going to be the primary driving factor in price. Goodbye gasoline, long live diesel! FREIGHTWAVES: Ive got one more big-picture, long-term question. Were seeing an increasing adoption of passenger cars. Obviously, finding an electric tractor-trailer is not quite as seamless as buying a Chevy Bolt or a Tesla. Do you think that in the next 10 to 20 years that diesel demand will be more resilient than gasoline demand or is this an oversimplification? KINGSTON: I think youre right. I think that most refiners are probably looking at the idea that their diesel demand will stay a little more stable. Its probably less subject to disruption. I think thats very legitimate. I think thats in the long-term calculations of a lot of companies no doubt about it. Poster Comment: Charts at source. Rising diesel prices not good for anyone. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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