Oil Products Scream Higher Prices Are Coming

 | Jun 10, 2022 06:28

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Crude oil continues to digest early March highs
  • Gasoline, heating oil prices reach record levels
  • Crack spreads show demand is robust
  • New all-time highs in Brent, WTI on horizon

In April 2020, nearby crude oil futures traded below zero, falling to a record low of -$40.32 as the nearby NYMEX futures contract expired. The decline into an abyss came as there was nowhere to store the energy commodity. WTI is landlocked petroleum with a delivery point in Cushing, Oklahoma.

Meanwhile, Brent futures fell to $16 per barrel. Brent futures represent seaborne petroleum, with more storage options in tankers worldwide. However, Brent fell to its lowest price this century as the global pandemic caused crude oil demand to evaporate.

Since the April 2020 lows, WTI and Brent have moved steadily higher, closing 2021 at $75.21 and $77.78 per barrel, respectively. In 2022, prices soared after Russia invaded Ukraine. U.S. energy policy addressing climate change handed control of oil pricing to OPEC+, with production decisions now coming from Moscow and Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Crude oil became a political tool in 2022 as sanctions on Russia and Russian retaliation have made the oil market a geopolitical hot potato. After years of suffering from low prices because of rising U.S. shale production, the Saudis have gone along with the Russians for the bullish ride. Saudi Arabia requires an $80-per-barrel price to balance its budget. At more than $120 per barrel, the revenues have been nothing short of amazing. Saudi Aramco (TADAWUL:2222) recently replaced Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) as the publicly traded company with the top market cap. Aramco trades on the Saudi stock market.

While crude oil is sitting at its highest price since 2008, oil product prices are screaming new highs are coming.

h2 Crude Oil Continues To Digest Early March Highs/h2

In early March, nearby WTI crude oil futures probed over the $130-per-barrel level, while Brent futures nearly reached $140 per barrel.