Monday, 20 April 2020

Explainer: Oil prices crash and impact on Nigeria’s economy

By Rasheed Sobowale

For the first time ever, the US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for May delivery ended trading at -$37.63 on Monday.

Before the market closed, the WTI oil prices were seen to be dropping sharply, notably below $12, the first time in 21 years. The sharp drop to negative is something that has never been recorded before.

Below are some questions to assess what this means and how it affects Nigeria.

What does this mean for oil-producing countries like Nigeria?

Oil producing countries have different benchmarks their commodity is valued against. Nigeria crude oil, for instance, is benchmarked against the Brent Crude which as at 11:41 pm on Monday is valued at $25.57 while the West Texas Intermediate, although still negative, has slightly appreciated to $-16.20.

The Brent Crude is considered the international benchmark. Other benchmarks include but not limited to Mexican Basket (currently trading at $14.35), Indian Basket (currently trading at $20.56) and Dubai (currently trading at $28.11).

What does the negative value mean?

The current negative valuation of the WTI is for the May delivery. June delivery is trading at a still low of $22 a barrel.

Sellers of the May contract have just one more day to find buyers, but with storage in short supply, they are struggling to find takers.

The negative valuation therefore simply implies sellers are paying others to take the commodity.

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