Page added on October 3, 2014
The S&P GSCI 2015 Rebalance Preview marks a historic shift in the benchmark renowned for its world production weight.
According to this announcement of pro-forma weights, Brent crude oil is targeted take over WTI‘s status as the leading oil benchmark and the most heavily weighted commodity in the S&P GSCI. This is the first time since 1997 that a commodity other than WTI crude oil is set to be the most heavily weighted. (Natural gas was greater at times from 1994-7.)
In 1987, WTI was added to the S&P GSCI with a target weight of roughly 35% that declined to 32.6% by the end of that year. Brent was added in 1999 with a weight of about 7.5%, and by that year’s end it grew to 10.9% while WTI’s weight fell to 26.3%. Since then, WTI’s weight had grown to 40.6% by June 2008 but dropped to 25.5% as of 9/30/2014, replaced quickly by Brent which continued has continued to rise to its current level of 22.9%. Its pro-forma 2015 target weight of 24.7% is almost double its 2008 weight and more than 3x its weight from initiation.
The dynamics of the crude market have changed, especially since 2010, as unconventional crude and liquids have seen an explosive growth in production from shale oil fields in Texas, North Dakota and also from increased Canadian imports. This increased supply of crude oil resulted in bottlenecks and oversupply at the Cushing pipeline nexus, which put pricing pressure on WTI. Now, pipeline capacity has been increased and transportation improved to reduce the Brent premium.
The chart below shows the premium collapse in index terms that in dollar terms translates from a high of about $20 to near parity today.
While in the Americas, WTI crude remains the benchmark for pricing, a number of U.S. based hedgers use Brent due to its global fundamental relevance, and also since it is internationally arbitraged to U.S. refined oil product exports and oil imports. Since U.S. refined product exports and oil imports are not constrained by pipeline infrastructure, or restrictions on exporting U.S. crude, Brent futures are used as effective hedging tools. Below is a map that shows the widespread influence of Brent oil in benchmark pricing.
Might this mean a greater opportunity for producers to hedge? Recently, the Brent curve has collapsed from bearish secular trends for the Atlantic Basin and Asia imports from West Africa. However, this puts pressure on Middle East suppliers to cut back. So there are both bull and bear pressures on Brent, making it likely range-bound – but conceivably at a lower range.
More disruptions are possible and only a major one, probably from the Middle East might offset more production, especially from Saudi Arabia. Though influences from new refinery capacity in the Middle East may substitute crude supplies with products. On the upside in the short term, production growth in Lybia and Iraq is unlikely to grow fast enough to surpass disruptions from Nigeria and Venezeula.
3 Comments on "Brent crude oil now has the biggest chunk of the GSCI"
trickydick on Fri, 3rd Oct 2014 10:12 pm
Yeah whatever, I have a Finance degree and I fail to see the point of one type of oil being used as a pricing benchmark versus some other, almost identical oil being used. It’s irrelevant in the larger scheme of things. The reason is that they MUST have a tendency to move in the same direction, almost all of the time (since they are almost identical). Otherwise, people would arbitrage the difference away quickly and people on the other side of that trade would get tired of losing.
rockman on Sat, 4th Oct 2014 12:31 pm
Dick – Maybe because I don’t deal with the futures market but I also don’t get their point.
Nony on Sat, 4th Oct 2014 6:35 pm
I’m also unclear what the point of the index is itself, but the wiki article and the S&P home page give some background to help.
I think it’s pretty clear that there has been a larger than normal spread for last several years between WTI and Brent and that it varies essentially based on issues of transport and export restrictions within the U.S. It can’t be arbitraged away because of the point of sale of WTI and the export restriction.
Brent is the “world price of oil” and also corresponds to traded finished products better (including in the U.S.) since there are no export restrictions on finished products. [The export restrictions mean that U.S. refiners pick up the difference in value…not U.S. gasoline consumers.]