Outrageous Predictions
Carry trade unwind brings USD/JPY to 100 and Japan’s next asset bubble
Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Head of Commodity Strategy
WTI trading above Brent is a rare development that, at first glance, appears to challenge the established hierarchy of global crude benchmarks. Under normal conditions, WTI trades at a discount to Brent, reflecting its inland U.S. pricing point at Cushing, Oklahoma, and relatively lower exposure to international seaborne markets. However, the recent price action is not signalling a structural repricing of crude quality or geography. Instead, it highlights the importance of curve structure in an exceptionally tight market.
At the core of the move is an escalating supply shock linked to the Middle East conflict and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz. This has severely disrupted flows of crude and refined products, lifting the risk premium across global energy markets. With no clear timeline for normalization, buyers have increasingly focused on securing immediately available supply, pushing prompt prices sharply higher.
The impact is most visible in the futures curve. Both WTI and Brent are trading in steep backwardation, where front-month contracts command significant premiums over deferred delivery. In the last two weeks, the May WTI contract has surged from USD 3 to a USD +14 per barrel premium above June, reflecting extreme tightness in the prompt U.S. market. At the same time, physical Brent cargoes swapped hands at USD 141.26 last Thursday - with the next spot price being fixed at 4:30 pm London time today - underlining the intensity of demand for near-term supply in the global market.
This is where the apparent inversion emerges. The comparison being made is between May WTI and June Brent. In a market characterised by extreme backwardation, that one-month difference becomes critical. May WTI is more closely aligned with current spot conditions and therefore embeds a larger scarcity premium than June Brent, which reflects delivery at a slightly later point.
Once this timing mismatch is accounted for, the traditional relationship remains intact. On a like-for-like June basis, Brent still trades at a very elevated premium of roughly USD 11–12 per barrel to WTI. This spread continues to reflect Brent’s greater exposure to global seaborne flows and geopolitical risk given the current and very large disruption to Middle East exports.
In essence, the market is not suggesting that U.S. inland crude has become structurally more valuable than internationally traded crude. Rather, it is signalling that the value of immediate delivery has surged to an unusually high level. In periods of extreme stress, the front of the curve can dominate price signals, temporarily distorting traditional benchmark relationships.
Backwardation at current levels also provides insight into market expectations. The six-month spread highlights just how extreme current conditions have become, with June Brent trading at a USD 29.6 premium to deferred delivery, while WTI—given its starting point in May—trades at an even more pronounced USD 37.7 per barrel. While the front of the curve reflects acute scarcity, the lower prices further out suggest that participants anticipate at least partial normalization over time. This could come through a combination of demand destruction, supply adjustments, or an eventual easing of geopolitical tensions. Until then, the premium for prompt barrels is likely to remain elevated, providing ETF investors in passive long crude oil positions an elevated positive roll return.
The recent move therefore serves as a useful reminder: in highly dislocated markets, where supply shocks drive steep backwardation, the timing of delivery can matter as much as the benchmark itself. What appears to be a shift in relative value is, in reality, a reflection of how aggressively the market is pricing immediacy.