Corporate Valuation, Oil & Gas

December 11, 2017

WTI Futures and Inventories

Back in August 2017, we discussed the significant and bullish shift in the oil futures market from contango pricing to backwardation. This shift marked the first time backwardation would enter the market since 2014 and oil and gas investors were taking note. This was a bullish sign for many, including producers and oil field services, but a bearish sign for those in crude oil storage. Possible reasons for this include the following.

Crude Oil Exports

The U.S. has never exported more crude oil than right now. Latest data from EIA indicates the export of 1.4 million barrels per day in the month of September; nearly double the August daily export figures. Since the unrefined crude oil export ban was lifted in early 2016, the total average daily export figures have exploded. The average number of barrels exported in 2015 was 465,000 while 2017's average is  960,000 barrels per day.

The top five nations receiving U.S. crude oil include 1) Canada; 2) China; 3) Korea; 4) United Kingdom; and 5) India. This group represents 65% of total exports in the month of September, with Canada leading the way with 23% of all U.S. exports while China is a close second at 17%.

Interestingly, South Korea has surged its imports of U.S. crude. For reference, the average daily oil exports to Korea between June 2000 and August 2016 was 6,200 barrels per day. In the last 12 months, that number has surged to 50,000 barrels per day (more than 8x the average for the 2000's).

Crude Oil Exports Takeaway: With the export ban rescinded, crude oil exports are increasing overall and specifically to eastern Asia.

2017 Hurricane Season Impact

As we wrote in our September 25, 2017 post, Hurricane Harvey, which made landfall in Houston, Texas, shut down more than 20% of the oil production from the Gulf of Mexico with additional onshore volumes shut-in.  Four terminals in Corpus Christi were closed to tanker traffic. Nearly 50% of the nation’s refining capacity is located along the Gulf Coast and at least 10 refineries were shut down before the storm’s arrival.

In response to the impact of hurricanes during 2017, U.S. refineries have been processing record seasonal volumes of crude to rebuild stocks of gasoline and especially diesel which were depleted by hurricanes and strong consumption at home and in export markets.

As a result, crude stocks along the East, West, and Gulf Coasts have all fallen since the summer and are well below last year's levels and appear tight.

Hurricane Season Takeaway: Refiners are running hard trying to replenish the stock lost during demand surge and shutdowns caused by the 2017 hurricane season. This results in higher demand for crude oil in the current market. Much of this demand is immediately filled by crude oil in storage.

US Oil Inventories – Weekly Petroleum Status Report, EIA

Crude storage inventories hit their highest level ever in March 2017 with 1.2 trillion barrels of crude oil. Since that time, inventories have declined by 117 million barrels, according to information available from the EIA. Storage levels play a significant role in futures prices. U.S. crude futures, such as West Texas Intermediate (WTI), are based on crude delivered into the tank and pipeline system around Cushing, Oklahoma.Futures prices are, therefore, very sensitive to anything that affects the regional supply-demand balance in the Midwest (PADD 2) as Cushing's falls under the Midwest reporting region.

Overall, commercial crude oil storage inventory levels across the U.S. are down 8% year-over-year. The largest single storage facility of commercial crude in the U.S. is stored in Cushing, Oklahoma. Cushing's inventory is down (15%) year-over-year, while the largest PADD area for crude oil storage (the Gulf Coast – PADD 3) was down (12%) year-over-year.

Crude Oil Inventory Takeaway: The inventory levels of crude oil are falling all across the nation in response to higher exports of crude oil, the impact from 2017 hurricane season, and the backwardation trend in WTI future prices which encourages selling rather than storage of crude oil.

Trend in WTI Future Curve

The table shows the future contract spread for the previous 12 months. The most recent data (December 1, 2017) returns the third month in a row of backwardation spreads since 2014.

In addition, the trend movement from contango to backwardation can be seen while watching the shrinking spread from August 2016, when the market had a wider contango spread of ($5.72), to backwardation in October 2017 to a significantly wider backwardation spread in December 2017.

Conclusion

The movement in the future spread toward backwardation is positive from an economic supply and demand perspective. Expectations are a backwardation environment will move crude oil prices higher, leading to more exploration and production activity, more active selling to refiners and the broader market, and less demand for storage. While this shift is good news for the overall industry, company specific risk and investors' fickle growth and risk attitudes create volatile public equity markets.

Mercer Capital has significant experience valuing assets and companies in the oil and gas industry, primarily oil and gas, bio fuels, and other minerals.  Our oil and gas valuations have been reviewed and relied on by buyers and sellers and Big 4 auditors. These oil and gas-related valuations have been utilized to support valuations for IRS estate and gift tax, GAAP accounting, and litigation purposes. We have performed oil and gas valuations and associated oil and gas reserves domestically throughout the United States and in foreign countries. Contact a Mercer Capital professional today to discuss your valuation needs in confidence.

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Mercer Capital Sponsors ASA Houston’s 2026 Energy Valuation Conference
Mercer Capital Sponsors ASA Houston’s 2026 Energy Valuation Conference
Mercer Capital is pleased to serve as a Gold Sponsor of the 2026 Energy Valuation Conference, hosted by the Houston Chapter of the American Society of Appraisers. The conference will take place on Thursday, May 14, 2026, at The Briar Club in Houston, Texas, with both in-person attendance and live webcast options available. Bryce Erickson, ASA, MRICS; J. David Smith, CFA, ASA; and Andrew B. Frew, ASA, ABV, will attend on behalf of Mercer Capital.Now in its 16th year, the Energy Valuation Conference brings together appraisers, accountants, financial analysts, petroleum engineers, and many other professionals working across the energy sector. The conference is designed as a multi-disciplinary forum addressing valuation techniques and issues across the energy industry, including upstream, midstream, downstream, renewables, power generation, tax, governance, and emerging market considerations.This year’s program will address a range of current valuation topics affecting the energy industry, including energy transition, transaction activity, capital markets, and valuation considerations across upstream, midstream, and downstream sectors.Bryce Erickson is a Managing Director at Mercer Capital and leads the firm’s energy industry practice. Since 1998, he has led approximately one thousand engagements across diverse purposes, including gift and estate tax planning, litigation support, mergers and acquisitions, buyouts, buy-sell agreements, financial reporting, purchase price allocation, financing, and business planning. He regularly publishes on oil and gas industry topics in Mercer Capital’s Energy Valuation Insights blog. He is also a contributor to Forbes.com’s Energy sector.J. David Smith is a Senior Vice President at Mercer Capital and a senior member of the firm’s energy practice. He provides valuation services for tax planning, transactional purposes, and financial reporting. David is also a regular contributor to Mercer Capital’s Energy Valuation Insights blog.Andrew B. Frew is a Vice President at Mercer Capital and has nearly 25 years of business valuation experience. He has been involved with hundreds of valuation and related engagements across numerous industries and values businesses and business interests for gift and estate tax, charitable giving, buy/sell agreements, mergers and acquisitions, business succession and exit planning, and litigation support purposes. Andy also contributes regularly to Mercer Capital’s Energy Valuation Insights blog.Mercer Capital works with energy companies, mineral and royalty owners, oilfield services businesses, investors, attorneys, accountants, and other advisors on valuation and financial advisory matters. The firm provides business valuation, asset valuation, litigation support, transaction advisory, financial reporting valuation, and tax valuation services across the energy sector, helping clients address complex financial questions with clear, independent, and well-supported analysis.Mercer Capital looks forward to supporting the conference and connecting with energy valuation professionals and industry leaders in Houston. Additional information about the 2026 Energy Valuation Conference is available at https://energyvaluationconference.org/.For more information about Mercer Capital’s experience and expertise in the oil & gas sector, visit https://mercercapital.com/industries/energy-power/oil-gas/.
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