Oil is down slightly, but is off the worst levels of the overnight session

FAN Editor

Oil prices pared losses to move off their lowest levels of the session in a volatile overnight trading session which saw international benchmark Brent crude dip below $16 per barrel at one point. Energy market participants are increasingly concerned about a growing supply glut and a lack of available storage.

International benchmark Brent crude traded 2 cent higher at $19.35 per barrel, while the June contract for U.S. West Texas Intermediate fell 26 cents, or 2.2%, to trade at $11.31. The July contract for WTI last traded at $19.48 per barrel.

At a time when the coronavirus crisis continues to crush global demand, the world is awash with oil and quickly running out of places to put it.

Per Magnus Nysveen, senior partner and head of analysis at Rystad Energy, warned that the situation in the oil markets was going to get worse.

“The world is running out of place to store the oil,” Nysveen told CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia” on Wednesday, adding that storage acts as “a kind of buffer.”

“When the supply and demand balance is positive or negative, then you can build or draw from storage,” he said. “But when the storage gets full, then there is no buffer for this very strong imbalance that we’re seeing.”

Offshore oil platforms are seen on April 20, 2020 in Huntington Beach, California. Oil prices traded in negative territory for the first time as the spread of coronavirus (COVID-19) impacts demand.

Michael Heiman | Getty Images

Pictet Wealth Management’s Jean-Pierre Durante agreed with Nysveen’s assessment of the situation, saying in a research note that the “world is overflowing in oil” despite a recent decision by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies — known collectively as OPEC+ — to cut oil supply.

“World storage capacity will rapidly reach saturation point,” said Durante, who is head of applied research at Pictet Wealth Management.

Coronavirus crisis

Global demand for oil has fallen dramatically, with major economies worldwide effectively frozen as a result of coronavirus-induced lockdowns imposed by authorities scrambling to contain the spread of the disease.

Wednesday’s moves in oil followed recent sharp declines in the sector. The May contract for WTI, which expired Tuesday,  plunged below zero for the first in history before clawing it’s way back into positive territory.

The June WTI contract plunged more than 40% on Tuesday while international benchmark Brent dropped from levels above $24 per barrel. 

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