It’s not all about storage.
Yes, the world is watching the available amount of oil storage to try to figure out when the ‘tank tops’ and there’s simply no more space to fill with unneeded crude. There are, however, two other happenings right now which are wonky but important and could send oil prices down in a hurry.
Also, on Monday S&P Dow Jones Indices quietly announced that all of its commodity indices will roll out of the June oil contract and into July. The “unscheduled roll” is happening because S&P Dow Jones Indices sees “the potential for the June 2020 WTI Crude Oil contract to price at or below zero” as well as what it calls the “steady decline in open interest for the June 2020 contract.”
In doing this, S&P Dow Jones Indices joins the beleaguered United States Oil Fund ETF, which trades under the ticker ‘USO,’ in abandoning the June contract for (hopefully) better days ahead.
As the world learned last week, not only are negative oil futures prices possible, but they can happen in a hurry, as the cycle of selling feeds on itself, and desperate traders and holders of the paper contracts will pay others to remove them of their obligation to find a home for oil they have no interest in taking delivery of.