Oil Prices: Why U.S., Saudi Arabia, Russia Could Reach A Production Agreement

 | Mar 31, 2020 02:59PM ET

Markets can go to zero, where the price of an asset is worthless. Many stocks and bonds have lost all value when defaults and bankruptcies occur. In the world of commodities, a glut in the onion futures market sent the price to zero years ago. Longs took delivery of the onions, dumped them in rivers, and sold the burlap bags. In the electricity market, power along a transmission line is a use-it or lose-it proposition. During periods of oversupply, a position in the commodity can become worthless.

In an environment of demand destruction on the back of coronavirus, the members of OPEC and Russia dealt the crude oil market a substantial blow when they decided to flood the world with petroleum. The move was likely an attempt to force marginal producers in the United States out of business. However, the Saudis, Russians and other producers may have shot themselves in the foot as the price became a falling knife and halved in value. Now, some analysts are saying that the price of the energy commodity could fall to zero or lower.

The United States Oil Fund, LP (NYSE:USO) and the United States Brent Oil Fund, LP (NYSE:BNO) reflect the price action in the two benchmark crude oil futures markets.

Oil Holds Above $20 Per Barrel

At the end of last week, the nearby NYMEX crude oil futures contract was knocking at the door at $20 per barrel again.