It is very important to understand the futures market not only because of its impact on supply and trading operations, but also because of its impact on wholesale product prices.
As shown by the blue arrow in the diagram, wholesale pricing is first driven by perceptions of future price from the futures markets, such as NYMEX and ICE. Petroleum prices respond to changes in supply and demand, not to changes in the cost of manufacturing or distribution.
Wholesale pricing generally takes one of two forms:
The reason for this dominance, is that every day thousands of NYMEX and ICE market participants can trade contracts that equal multiple times the annual global refined product volumes actually sold.
The easiest way to understand the key processes in supply and trading is to follow what happens in a typical morning supply meeting. The key decisions made at the meeting which are summarized in the chart, and each step in the chart will be covered in this lesson.
Most S&T operating groups meet before the NYMEX opens for business. Even with all the electronic exchanges, most trading activity around the world occurs when the New York NYMEX floor is open – from 9:00 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. EST.
With prevalent industry volatility “Every day is a new deal.” The logic used yesterday to make decisions is no longer valid or important.
At a morning supply meeting:
1. Individual supply network participants first review the physical impact of decisions made the day before (i.e., what actually happened) to ensure there is accuracy and visibility on inventory and commitments at all supply points. In the end, a determination is made on whether each supply point is long or short.
2. Next, the future direction of the market is debated at length. The most difficult judgment and risky part of the morning is to assess where the market is heading, not where it’s been.
3. The direction chosen affects the hedging strategy and the instrument(s) used to offset risk.
4. Once selected, the instrument is executed:
At the end of the day, the value and applicability of the current hedging instruments are reviewed with the trader by the risk manager in charge of that trader’s book.
The next morning, it starts all over again and adjustments are made as needed.
As the chart shows, all of the processes and day-to-day decisions in a supply trading function ultimately get reflected in the operating inventory levels.
Inventory level accuracy is also affected by the information systems used by the oil company or trader. For example, some systems do not adjust inventory until an invoice is generated. This process needs to be clearly understood by all traders and schedulers.
Inventory is the first item reviewed in the morning supply meeting, because inventory levels are the most important indicators of both physical position and balance around a supply network.
As the chart indicates, the data on the physical system must be routinely matched with the paper hedge positions to effectively measure and control any risk in the operation.
To judge the adequacy of inventory levels a supply and trading function first looks at how much inventory is accessible above the minimum required to run the system.
A very common term used to measure inventory levels in Supply and Trading is called days’ supply, which is calculated as shown in the chart:
The next process step in the morning supply meeting is to assess the future market direction.
One way to assess market direction is to examine the relationship between a commodity’s forward or futures price and its price for immediate delivery, or prompt price. This is not a forecast, but can say much about market conditions.
As the chart shows, in a market called pure contango, each succeeding month’s futures price exceeds its predecessor and the near-month futures price exceeds the spot price for the same commodity.
Contango is normal for a non-perishable commodity, like crude, and products which have a cost of carry. Such costs include warehousing fees and interest forgone on money tied up.
The reverse is true for a market in pure backwardation. As the chart shows, when the prompt price exceeds the futures price, the market is in backwardation. These conditions exist in degrees.
In backwardation, near prices become higher than far prices because:
A market that is steeply backwardated often indicates a perception of a current shortage in the commodity. By the same token, a market that is deeply in contango may indicate a perception of a current supply surplus in the commodity.
There is nothing “normal” about a backwardated market. Backwardation is an incentive not to hold inventory.
Note that when market conditions are in flux, for a time, there may be no clear pattern.
The next process step in the morning supply meeting is to select the appropriate hedging instrument and the most important factors in selecting the instrument are:
Before the introduction of forward and futures contracts, oil companies and traders had no effective means to set prices for future delivery. Today, derivatives have extended the oil market time horizon much further forward, as can be seen in the chart.
The most active futures contracts, such as CME WTI, now trade for delivery up to nine years out. The industry has also developed a new set of OTC swap and option trading instruments that enable participants to establish prices even further into the future.
The next process step in the morning supply meeting is to execute the deal – both the physical side and the hedge.
A variety of third party price services are used to monitor the deals.
The pricing, settlement, and reconciliation of physical crude and product deals requires a consistent and transparent pricing and indexing mechanism. Platts and Argus offer different approaches to market pricing methodology. The agreed upon mechanism for pricing and settlement will be stated in the contract of the deal.
All methods rely heavily on relationships with producers, S&T staff, refiners, traders and brokers to confirm the accuracy of data before publishing their index.
A common term used for the structure of a Supply & Trading Department, and most training operations is Front, Middle and Back Office, as described below:
A finance function – not part of the core trading operation – provides credit control and recording of transactions in the general ledger.
The basic processes in managing the deal flow of a Supply & Trading function are shown in the chart, and described below. Computers are essential to keeping track of this complex activity with thousands of transactions every day in most operations. Numerous providers of trading and risk management software have expertise and products that help manage these processes.
Effective Supply & Trading depends on tightly integrated organizational structures. The traditional functional organization is also ineffective for identifying, understanding, and managing risk.