A quick glance at front month oil futures volatility would seem to indicate that the market is plodding along quietly, balancing the size of OPEC's production cuts nearly exactly with the improving picture in the US oil industry. Compared with a year ago, 30- and 60-day volatilities for front month futures are indeed sharply lower as the market has grown more confident about a trajectory for gently rising oil prices. Longer dated futures (June and December 2017) have been showing a similar flattening of volatility, well below historic median levels. Price volatility in 2015-16 was indeed high but generally over the long-term commodity prices are characterized more by volatility than stability. The soft start to the year (WTI futures are down a little more than 3.5% year to date) may then be a little misleading if oil markets are getting back to 'normal'.
Risk-reversal strategies are also highlighting these apparently sanguine market conditions. A 25-delta risk reversal on front month WTI has stabilized a little below parity compared with a heavy put premium that the market tipped into last February. Indeed the 25-delta risk reversal has converged strongly to its five-year median and is converging on levels last seen when front month WTI futures were comfortably in the USD 80-110/b range.
We suspect there is a strong chance that put premiums could widen substantially again the longer front month prices stay in their current range. All indications point to a robust recovery in the US oil industry which will act as a brake on upside and may clear the way for downside risks:
We do remain positive on oil for 2017 on average but caution that this market may be getting ahead of itself. OPEC's production cut is one of the few lone supportive factors and while initial compliance appears to be strong we are cautious how well producers will be able to stick to targets going forward. In our view some more representation of downside risks in futures markets would better reflect current fundamentals.