Locator: 45112B.
***************************
Back to the Bakken
WTI: $75.51.
Friday, July 14, 2023: 67 for the month; 175 for the quarter, 430 for the year
39394, conf, Crescent Point Energy, CPEUSC Ruby 2-20-17-158N-100W-MBH,
38853, conf, Whiting, Littlefield 11-21H,
37923, conf, BR, Boxer 1B MBH-ULW,
37841, conf, Lime Rock, State B 3-25-36H-143-97,
Thursday, July 13, 2023: 63 for the month; 171 for the quarter, 426 for the year
37924,
conf, BR, Boxer 2A
TFH,
RBN Energy: Midland WTI surging into the Brent market. What does it mean for Brent? For Midland WTI? Archived.
Global crude oil markets are undergoing a profound transformation. But
it is mostly out of sight, out of mind for all but the most actively
involved players in the physical markets.
On the surface, it’s a simple
change in the Dated Brent delivery mechanism: Starting May 2023, cargoes
of Midland-spec WTI — we’ll shorten that to “Midland” for the sake of
clarity and simplicity — could be offered into the Brent Complex for
delivery the following month.
This change has been in the works for
years. Production of North Sea crudes that heretofore have been the
exclusive members of the Brent club has been on the decline for decades.
Allowing the delivery of Midland crude into Brent is intended to
increase the liquidity of the physical Brent market, thereby retaining
Brent’s status as the world’s preeminent crude marker, serving as the
price basis for two-thirds or more of physical crude oil traded in the
global market. So far, the new trading and delivery process has been
working well. Perhaps too well.
For the past two months, delivered
Midland has set the price of Brent about 85% of the time. The number of
cargoes moving into the Brent delivery “chain” process has skyrocketed,
and most of those cargoes are Midland. Is this just an opening surge of
players trying their hand in a new market, or does it mean that the
Brent benchmark price is becoming no more than freight-adjusted Midland?
In today’s RBN blog, we’ll explore this question, and what it could
mean for both global and domestic crude markets.