This Monday, international oil prices fell sharply due to eased tensions in the Middle East. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) and Brent crude oil prices recorded their largest single-day drop in recent years. The December delivery of WTI futures on the New York Mercantile Exchange dropped by 6.13%, closing at $67.38 per barrel, marking the largest decline since July 2022, while Brent crude futures fell by 6.09%, closing at $71.42 per barrel. This unexpected price collapse caught market investors off guard, causing tens of millions of dollars in call options previously purchased at high costs to instantly lose value.
The key factor prompting this change was the signs of easing after the escalation of conflict between Israel and Iran. The market had previously been worried that Israel might attack Iran's oil fields or nuclear facilities, potentially affecting Middle East oil supplies, which had driven many traders into the options market to make bullish bets on oil prices. However, over the weekend, although Israel launched bombings against Iran, it did not target its oil infrastructure, causing oil prices to plummet instantaneously, rendering options originally used to hedge risks as "sunk costs." About 800,000 Brent December delivery call options expired without reaching the strike price, and options contracts for 90 and 100 dollars out of 32 million barrels of bullish contracts also virtually vanished.
Nonetheless, some traders in the market are still holding options to hedge physical oil business, and the unfulfilled Brent 100-dollar call options for the first half of 2024 have increased to around 130,000. As oil price volatility is no longer confined to the futures market, December's 70-dollar put options saw a large volume of trading on Monday, indicating a rapid change in price skew and reflecting a decrease in market anxiety over oil price fluctuations. Although there are still potential risks in the Middle East situation, the pressure of short-term oil price surges has been alleviated, and the market focus may gradually shift.