Crude Oil Prices Are Set To Remain Strong

 | Feb 06, 2022 02:36AM ET

The fallout from the global spread of COVID-19 produced tremendous stress in energy markets. Early during the pandemic, in the first half of 2020, a negative demand shock from large-scale global lockdowns amplified the effects of a supply glut associated with a “market share war” amongst oil exporters to send the energy industry into a tailspin. This led to a historic rout that rapidly pushed crude oil prices to multi-decade lows.

In fact, the crisis was so severe that it caused a temporary collapse in market structure, with inland-linked crude price benchmarks such as West Texas Intermediate (WTI) plunging to deep negative prices, as storage hubs got overwhelmed and transportation costs surged. Brent crude, the most relevant benchmark for global trade, bottomed at around USD 19 per barrel in late April 2020.