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Oil collapses by another 24% to $20. It hasn't been this low since 2002

March 18, 2020


Matt Egan

The nightmare in the oil industry keeps getting worse. It's now facing the weakest oil price since the first term of President George W. Bush.


Intensifying recession fears drove US oil prices down a staggering 24% Wednesday to $20.37 a barrel. That's the lowest level since February 2002.


Selling escalated throughout the day, with 9% morning losses more than doubling by the afternoon. The acceleration reflects a growing realization of just how much the coronavirus outbreak is slamming the world economy.


The relentless selling is being driven by a crushing combination of excess supply and shrinking demand. And it's dealing a crushing blow to America's once-booming oil industry.


The coronavirus pandemic has caused global travel to collapse, eating into the world's once-insatiable thirst for oil, which powers the economy. Countless flights have been canceled. The cruise industry is at a standstill. Highways are empty. And many factories are dark.


At the same time, Russia and Saudi Arabia picked a terrible time to step away from roles as price stabilizers.

Russia refused to cut production, in a bid to drown America's high-cost shale producers in a sea of cheap crude. Saudi Arabia responded by slashing prices and ramping up production -- exactly the opposite of what was needed to balance the market.

"With each day there seems to be yet another trapdoor lying beneath oil prices," Louise Dickson, analyst at Rystad Energy, wrote in an emailed comment. "What we are seeing here is essentially the atomic bomb equivalent in the oil markets."


Demand is collapsing at breathtaking pace


With travel restrictions and quarantines accelerating, energy analysts are scrambling to downgrade their oil demand forecasts.

Goldman Sachs now expects 2020 oil demand to shrink by 1.1 million barrels per day, hitting a low in March when demand could plunge by 8 million barrels.

Rystad Energy is even more pessimistic, calling for a plunge of 2.8 million barrels per day in 2020. That's up fourfold from the energy firm's previous call for a drop of just 600,000 barrels per day. April demand alone is likely to nosedive by 11 million barrels per day, Rystad said.

Jet fuel is the biggest problem, with airlines around the world scrapping flights and parking planes because of travel restrictions. Global commercial air traffic will drop by about 20% this year, Rystad predicted.

Against that dismal backdrop, analysts warn more selling is likely to come in the oil patch.

Goldman Sachs warned Tuesday evening of an "inevitable fall" in US oil prices to around $20 a barrel during the second quarter. That's well below the Wall Street bank's previous call for $29 oil.

One of the problems is that there is now so much oil around the world that it will be difficult to find places to put it all.

"We believe the velocity of the upcoming inventory builds is now certain to overwhelm the ability to fill storage," Damien Courvalin, head of energy research at Goldman Sachs, wrote to clients in a note. Good news: Cheap gas. Bad news: Looming bankruptcies

The oil crash could provide a bit of good news to American consumers shellshocked by the coronavirus crisis. The national average price of gasoline has dropped to $2.22, according to AAA. That's down from $2.44 a month ago. Two-thirds of all US states are seeing double-digit price drops on the week, AAA said.

Yet many drivers won't even get to take advantage of the cheap prices at the pump because of travel restrictions and requirements to work from home. That calls into question how much American consumers will really benefit from the oil crash.

What is far more certain is the pain the oil crash will inflict on America's oil industry. Major oil companies including Chevron (CVX) and ExxonMobil (XOM) have warned of spending and cost cuttings. Occidental Petroleum (OXY)slashed its dividend by 86%. And many smaller oil companies riddled with debt will be forced to lay off workers and consider filing for bankruptcy.

cnn.com

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