03/26 Closing Prices / revised 03/27/2026 08:09 GMT | 03/26 OPEC Basket  $75.96 +$0.33 cents | 03/26 Mexico Basket (MME) $66.80 +$0.43 cents |   02/28 Venezuela Basket (Merey)  $64.96   -$1.90 cents  03/26 NYMEX Light Sweet Crude  $69.65 +$0.65 cents | 03/26 ICE Brent $73.79 +$0.77 cents  03/26 RBOB  $223.28 +0.21cents | 03/26 USLD  $ 228.87 +2.88 cents | 03/26 NYMEX Natural Gas  $3.861 +0.074 cents | 03/21 Baker Hughes Rig Count (Oil & Gas) 593 +1 | 03/27 USD – Dollar/MXN  20.2429 (data live) 03/27 EUR – USD  $1.0761 (data live)  03/27 US/Bs. (Bolivar)  $69.01880000 (data BCV) Source: WTRG/MSN/Bloomberg/MarketWatch/Reuters

World’s Most-Important Oil Price Tops $100, Signals More to Come

By Alex Longley/Bloomberg News

LONDON
EnergiesNet.com 02 17 2022

 Forget the futures market, the world’s most important oil price just smashed through $100 a barrel with every sign it is going to push higher. 

Dated Brent, the price of cargoes bought and sold in the North Sea, reached $100.80 a barrel on Wednesday for the first time since 2014, according to S&P Global Platts, the company that publishes the marker. Price spreads in the futures market are pointing to one the tightest markets ever.

The surge through $100 a barrel for Dated matters because the daily price assessment is at the center of a web of complex oil derivatives and also sets a baseline against which millions of barrels of crude are transacted daily. It also shows that the rally in futures prices — they passed $96 at one point on Wednesday — is in part being driven by what’s happening in the real world.

The oil market globally is roaring higher because of demand that’s exceeding what some organizations — including the International Energy Agency — had been anticipating. That surge in consumption has compounded the fact that nations in the OPEC+ producer alliance are not managing to pump as much crude as they had said they would.

Dated Brent reflects an oil price that’s more immediate than futures markets. Its rally shows how traders are willing to pay up to secure actual barrels for delivery to refineries. 

A similar sense of urgency is evident in the forward curve in the futures market. The six-month timespread in Brent — the gap between most immediate prices and those six months later — reached as much as $8.74 a barrel on Wednesday, according to ICE Futures Europe data. That’s the biggest in data going back to 2007.

bloomberg.com 02 16 2022

Share this news

Leave a Comment


 EnergiesNet.com

About Us

 

By Elio Ohep · Launched in 1999 under Petroleumworld.com

Information & News on Latin America’s Energy, Oil, Gas,
Renewables, Climate, Technology, Politics and Social issues

Contact : editor@petroleuworld.com


CopyRight©1999-2024, Petroleumworld.com
, EnergiesNet.com™  /
Elio Ohep – All rights reserved
 

This site is a public free site and it contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner.We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of business, environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have chosen to view the included information for research, information, and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission fromPetroleumworld or the copyright owner of the materia

 

Energy - Environment

No posts found!

Point of View

EIA Total Energy Review
This Week in Petroleum