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Checked Your Crack Spread
Lately?
Research for Online Investors
by John Dalt
12/02/09
One of the things that can lower
your IQ is listening to a politician. When I served on a local school board, every
proposal to curtail spending was met with, “We just want what
is best for the children.” After being beat over the head with this a
few times, I began every proposal with, “We all want what is
best for the children.” It didn’t always stop the mantra, but left
some speechless because they did not know what else to
say.
Every discussion about energy
independence involves some repeat of this
statistic.
“The U.S. hasn’t built a refinery
in the last thirty years!” Every politician has it written on a 3 X 5
card, ready to pull out, like “break glass in case of a
fire.”
This is like scratching a
chalkboard to me. The U.S. doesn’t build refineries; private
business still does this piece of heavy
lifting.
The government has passed so many
regulations, who in their right mind would risk capital to site
a new refinery? The cost of compliance with regulations has
made operating a refinery a marginal business, why go to the
expense of building a new one? New refineries are being built overseas, and
in the newest twist, on floating platforms so they have
no government
oversight.
There are no “new” refineries in
the U.S., but many have been expanded. The refining business was actually very
profitable from 2004 through 2007 as Americans drove to hockey
games and work. Retail gasoline prices pushing $4.00 per
gallon slowed down consumption in 2008, and it has not
recovered.
Lower demand combined with cheap
refined products, coming from locations with less regulatory
cost, have made the refining business in the U.S. a
loser.
Profitability in refining is
measured by the “crack spread.” This refers to the chemical process to
‘crack’ the large crude oil molecule to smaller refined
product’s molecules. Crack Spread is the difference in the cost of
crude oil and the price at which the derived refined products
can be sold. A barrel of
oil is 42 gallons, producing approximately 28 gallons of
gasoline and 14 gallons of distillates
(diesel).
Multiply these numbers times the
wholesale price for each product. The total of these numbers is the gross
proceeds for a barrel of refined crude
oil.
Subtract the cost of crude
oil; the balance is the “crack
spread.”
You can come close to the
wholesale price of refined products by subtracting $0.20
from the cheapest retail price found. This approximates the retail markup and
transportation costs from port or wellhead to
pump.
If gasoline is $2.44 per gallon
and diesel is $2.56, subtract 0.20 to arrive at wholesale
prices.
28 x 2.24 =
62.72
14 x 2.36 =
33.04
Gross:
95.76
Crude: -
79.50
Crack
Spread:
$16.26
The crack spread approached $40
after Hurricane Katrina because of shutdowns and shortage of
refining capacity.
There are ancillary products such
as propane and asphalt, but they make up a small portion of the
refiners operation.
According to the Energy
Information Agency (EIA), refining capacity in the U.S. has
actually increased in the last decade, because of the
expansion of existing
refineries.

This week’s inventory report
showed a 2.1 million build in crude oil
supplies.
This was larger than
expected.
I expected a larger drop in
imports than the actual 500 thousand
barrels.
I also expected gasoline
stocks to drop with heavy holiday travel, they did
not.
Gasoline stocks actually
increased 4 million barrels. Distillate stocks decreased 1.2 million
barrels, but there is so much distillate you could miss
this much. Inventories of distillates are 32%
above last year’s
levels.
Maobama did a nice job of boring
us to death last night. He should make a few trips to Afghanistan,
like President Bush did to Iraq. Osama might give up if he had to listen to
the Teleprompter President day and
night.
The information presented in this newsletter is based on
generally available news releases, corporate filings, current
events, interviews and the editor’s opinions. It may contain errors and you
should not make investment decisions based solely on what you
believe you have read here. Do your own research, it is
your money. If you
lose it, it is your responsibility, not ours or your
grandmothers! The
editor may or may not have a position in any securities
discussed. The
editor may have held a position in a security earlier, or in
the future.
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