Weakness In Oil 'Crack' Spreads Provides Clue For Crude Price, Global Economy

 | Sep 21, 2020 09:20AM ET

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Processing spreads: real-time indicator of demand
  • Crude oil recovered, but crack spreads remained weak
  • Oil falls with the stock market; refining spreads continue to point to weakness
  • Seasonally weak time of the year, but other compelling factors point to higher prices

A crack spread reflects the processing or refining margin for those companies that take a barrel of crude oil, pass it through a catalytic cracker, which turns the petroleum into oil products like gasoline and distillates.

The international crude oil market is sensitive to a complex collection of geopolitical, fundamental, and technical factors. When it comes to supply and demand fundamentals, the term structure of the oil market or the price differential between different delivery periods tells us if the market is in a glut or deficit of reserves.

Quality and location spreads like the price difference between the two benchmark crude oils, Brent and West Texas Intermediate, provide insight into worldwide production as well as the demand for specific oil products, as Brent is more suitable for processing into distillates. WTI’s lower sulfur content makes it a preferable choice for refining into gasoline.

Crack spreads are another significant factor when it comes to the path of least resistance for the price of crude oil, which is the input in the refining process. Over the past months, as the price of crude oil recovered, gasoline and distillate crack spreads remained under pressure, which was a warning sign for the energy commodity.

h2 Processing spreads: real-time indicator of demand/h2

Crack spreads are a real-time indicator in two senses. As crude oil is the primary ingredient in refining the energy commodity into gasoline and distillate products, it is a barometer of demand for the products and the raw crude oil.

The processing spreads are also an indicator of the day-to-day profitability for the refining companies that pass crude oil through catalysts where different temperatures create the various oil products. Rising crack spreads tell us that refinery profits are increasing and that crude oil demand is robust. Declining crack spreads have the opposite impact when it comes to the demand for raw petroleum and refinery earnings. In 2020, the refining spreads have been trending lower—a sign of continued economic woes. 

h2 Crude oil recovered, but crack spreads remained weak/h2

Crude oil prices moved higher since the lows in late April. The continuous NYMEX futures contract rose from below zero on April 20 to over $40 per barrel. Brent futures rose from $16, the lowest level of this century, to over $40 per barrel and were above that level at the end of last week. Meanwhile, even as the volatility in crude oil caused lots of price variance in the crack spreads, the gasoline and distillate spreads have been trading lower even as the price of crude oil recovered.