Topic: How To Invest

Greetings Pat and staff: I have heard that the price that Alberta bitumen receives from exports to the U.S. is discounted by $40 per barrel. Could this be true? What are the consequences? Thanks for your time.

Article Excerpt

In late 2012 and early 2013, Alberta’s heavy oil, or bitumen, was trading at a discount of around $40 U.S. a barrel to U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) light crude. Bitumen from the oil sands is a thick, tar-like form of oil that requires more processing than regular crude. The lower price for Canadian bitumen was mostly due to a lack of pipeline and refinery capacity. As well, increased U.S. light oil production drove down the price of Alberta’s harder-to-process heavy oil. Since then, though, the discount has narrowed: earlier this month, Alberta oil sold for $19.50 U.S. a barrel less than U.S. benchmark WTI light crude. An increase in oil-by-rail shipments has helped narrow the price differential. In the longer term, new pipelines, such as Enbridge’s Northern Gateway or TransCanada Corp.’s Keystone XL or Energy East projects, should help, as well. Moreover, as the U.S. economy improves, it’s raising demand and oil prices, especially in the key Midwest region. Improved pipeline access…