One year after crude turned negative, oilpatch relishes first-quarter profit outlook
On Friday, the WTI price settled at $63.19 US per barrel

One year after oil prices crashed to their first and only negative close during a perfect storm of energy demand bad news, Canada's oilpatch is poised to report a first-quarter gush of cash flow thanks to a dramatic recovery in global demand.
On April 20, 2020, the U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate near-month contract price ended the day down a whopping $55.90 US at an unprecedented -$37.63 per barrel.
The negative close was caused by a mix of technical commodities market factors and concerns about oversupply as storage tanks grew dangerously close to full amid a collapse in demand fuelled by pandemic lockdowns and short-lived price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia, said senior commodity analyst Martin King of RBN Energy in Calgary.
"Everyone was very, very negative on oil and oil demand," he recalled in an interview, adding the remarkable level of stabilization since shows how resilient the oilpatch can be.
"So the market essentially wound up balancing itself out and we had a recovery from the depths of hell to not quite to heaven in terms of current prices, but certainly a very large scale recovery.
'A better balance'
"Those two forces of supply and demand were brought back into a much better balance and with the demand recovery we're seeing this year, we're seeing inventories worldwide get drawn down to more normal levels."
On Friday, the WTI price settled at $63.19 US per barrel, a level at which most production in North America, including in the Alberta oilsands, is profitable, said King.
WTI daily spot prices have averaged $60.46 US per barrel so far in the second quarter, up from $58.13 US in the first quarter. Both are a far cry from the $27.95per barrel average in the second quarter of 2020.
On Wednesday, the International Energy Agency raised its world oil demand estimate for 2021, pointing to further signs that the global economy is recovering faster than previously expected, particularly in the U.S. and China.
It now expects world oil demand to expand by 5.7 million barrels per day in 2021 to 96.7 million bpd, following a collapse of 8.7 million bpd last year.