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Modeling Oil Markets Janie M. Chermak, University of New Mexico Robert H Patrick, Rutgers University October 26, 2015 Literature • • • • • Medlock and Jaffe (2009) 2007-2008 speculation Hamilton (2009) speculation, OPEC, scarcity rent Dvir & Rogoff (2009) 1896-2008 price behavior Kilian (2010) S&D shocks Kellogg (2014) Impact of infill drilling on investment Components • Demand (consumption, additions to storage) • Supply (production, imports, withdrawals from storage) • Futures Demand (consumption, storage in) Supply (base production, new production, storage out, imports) Storage Futures (commercial and non-commercial traders) Futures Market Commercial (arbitrage) traders are those whose primary businesses are exposed to oil price fluctuations and hedge risks in futures markets to stabilize cash flows. Non-commercial (speculative) traders speculate on crude oil price movements. Contango/Backwardation If C4>C1, then DIFF>0 – Contango If C4<C1, DIFF<0 - Backwardation Market(s) Demand for Crude Oil æ spot price,economic conditions,ö Crude oil demand = f ç ÷ø è inventory, shocks / events,... Inverse Supply of Crude Oil æ crude oil supply, futures prices, stock, ö Spot price = g ç è economic conditions, shocks / events,...÷ø Futures Price Futures price = h ( spot price, speculation,inventory, shocks / events ) Data from EIA, Baker Hughes: Weekly 1/1/1986 – 10/1/2015 Model (ARCH/GARCH- in means) • Equation 1: Quantity Demanded is a function of: – – – – – – WTI Spot Price [ -/- ] * Prime Rate [+/+] * + Change in Storage [ +/-] S&P [+/+] * Time [+/+] * Binaries: • Recession [-/-] *, 9/11[-/+] * – Variance Terms • Recession (-/-)*; 9/11 (+/+)* * Significant at 5% or greater MODEL (ARCH GARCH - in means) • Equation 2: WTI Spot Price is a function of: – – – – – – Futures Price (+/+)* Oil Rig Count (+/+)* Production (+/+)* Change in Storage (-/-)* Contango/Backwardation (+/-)* Open Interest • NC Short (+/+)*; NC Long (-/-)*: NC Spread (+/+)*; CS Short (+/+)*; CL (-/-)* – Variance Terms • CFMA (+/+)*; 9/11 (+/+)* * Significant at 5% or greater MODEL (ARCH GARCH - in means) • Equation 3: Futures Price is a function of: – Open Interest (+/+)* – CFMA (+/+)* – S&P (+/+)* – Gold (-/+)* – Days of Storage (-/+) – Time (?/-)* – Variance Terms: • 9/11 (+/+)* * Significant at 5% or greater Conclusions Market Fundamentals are Significant Storage Is Significant Shocks Are Significant Financial Markets and Rules are Significant Significance of Relative Impacts Changes Over Time Thank You [email protected] [email protected] The Crude Oil Consumer’s Objective max p = pz (t) f k (K k (t), Lk (t),qk (t)) - r(t)K k - w(t)Lk (t) - P(t)qk (t) K ,L,q Individual Demand for Crude ( ) qk (t) = f w(t),r(t), P(t), p z (t);W k , Individual Demand for Crude K F(t) = å qk (t). k=1 The Producer’s Objective: Individual Producer’s Supply: qi (t) = f (EPi (t),ri (t), mi (t),d i (t), Ri (t); bi ), Aggregate Supply: I Y(t) = å qi (t). i=1 Equilibrium without Storage or Futures ( P(t) = f F(w(t),r(t),p z (t);W),Y(r(t), m (t),EP(t),d(t),R(t);b) ) Storage ì > e-h j (t+t ) ENP (t + t ) then s (t) < 0 j j ï ï - h j (t+t ) If Pt í = e ENPj (t + t ) then s j (t) = 0 ï - h j (t+t ) ENPj (t + t ) then s j (t) > 0 ï <e î ( s j (t) = f s j (t -1),rj (t),rj (t + 1),...,rj (t + t ),ENPj (t + t ) S(t) = å s j (t) )