Oils Ain’t Oils

April 29, 2020
Luke at CoinJar
AuthorLuke at CoinJar
Share this:
Oils Ain’t Oils

Oil prices are literally through the floor and it’s making crypto look like an oasis of stability.

On April 20 you could, for a brief moment, get paid US$40 for buying a barrel of oil. For a sense of how insane that is, try and imagine it happening to any other commodity, bitcoin included. Here were producers facing such a depressed economic outlook that they were literally paying people to take their product off their hands.

Of course, the real price of oil never dropped below zero, although it is trading at inflation-adjusted prices that haven’t been seen in more than seven decades. Rather what occurred was an over-leveraged derivatives market realising that in this particular horror movie the calls were coming from inside the house.

Fill ‘er up?

Oil is a curiosity in that its price is determined not by straight-up supply and demand, but rather on the futures markets. Instead of buying and selling oil itself, speculators are instead buying and selling contracts to purchase oil at a certain price on a certain date. Basically, this means that oil prices are hugely influenced by market sentiment. And on April 20, that market sentiment finally caught COVID-19.

Right now, half the world’s population is in lockdown. Plane travel has essentially ceased and people have stopped commuting to work. In short, our need for oil, the liquid that keeps the world moving, has collapsed. (Unsurprisingly, this has also been a great turn of events for the environment). There is so much excess oil around at the moment that there is literally nowhere to store it.

On April 20, oil traders realised that they were about to be on the hook for a product that no-one needed and that they couldn’t actually do anything with. So they began panic-selling, causing the sort of catastrophic drawdown that made trading bitcoin look like keeping a stash of gold under your bed: at its peak, the price of the May futures contract had dropped more than 300% in a single day’s trading.

A learning experience

There are two takeaways that crypto can, uh, take away from this clusterfarge.

First is a cautionary tale about derivatives trading. Futures, options and margin trading are by their very nature emotion-driven. Unhinged futures are the reason bitcoin dropped 50% last month, as opposed to, say, 30%. These markets are designed to take money from the unwary, the incautious and the overly confident. They require tremendous skill, patience and time to use properly and, even then, events like April 20 can blow your plans out of the water. But that’s a message that tends to get lost when you’re being bombarded with advertising campaigns claiming “100x GAINZ!!!! OMG SIGN UP NOW DOOFUS!”

Second is a reflection on crypto itself. Bitcoin was a laughing stock when it halved in value last month. But since then it’s pretty much back where it was before the crash. Meanwhile, the global economy is being racked by panic selling, currency collapse, debt implosions and deflationary spirals. To try and slow the damage, governments have been printing money, dishing out bailouts and racking up generationally crippling debts. Bitcoin, on the other hand, never stopped trading, never asked for a bailout and didn’t need any financial stimulus. I dunno: maybe you’d call that the most resilient asset in the world.

Now where’s our ETF, dammit!

Ask CoinJar

So, does this mean that bitcoin futures could also go negative?

In a word: unlikely. Part of the reason why the oil futures collapse was so dramatic was because these are actual, physical contracts that are being traded: when the contract hits its endpoint the person stuck holding it needs to find a way of taking delivery. Hence the enjoyable sight last week of an amateur trader on Reddit discovering in real time that the US$26,000 he’d just made buying 1,000 barrels worth of oil futures was about to land him in a lot of trouble. (Given that bitcoin can literally be stored on a piece of paper, it’s hard to imagine it having storage issues at any point in the near future).

By contrast, most of the futures being traded on crypto exchanges are what’s known as perpetual swaps. Rather than having a fixed endpoint when people exchange bitcoin for dollars, they’re rolling bets on the price of bitcoin at any given moment. They are literally derivative: no bitcoin is ever actually changing hands and the futures price is (generally) driven by the price of bitcoin and not vice versa.

We are not affiliated, associated, endorsed by, or in any way officially connected with any business or person mentioned in articles published by CoinJar. All writers’ opinions are their own and do not constitute financial or legal advice in any way whatsoever. Nothing published by CoinJar constitutes an investment or legal recommendation, nor should any data or content published by CoinJar be relied upon for any investment activities. CoinJar strongly recommends that you perform your own independent research and/or seek professional advice before making any financial decisions.


Warning: Past performance is not a reliable guide to future performance. If you invest in this product, you may lose some, or all, of the money you invest. The above information is not to be read as investment, legal or tax advice and takes no account of particular personal or market circumstances; all readers should seek independent investment, legal and tax advice before investing in cryptocurrencies. There are no government or central bank guarantees in the event something goes wrong with your investment. This information is provided for general information and/or educational purposes only. No responsibility or liability is accepted for any errors of fact or omission expressed therein. CoinJar Europe Limited makes no representation or warranty of any kind, express or implied, regarding the accuracy, validity, reliability, availability, or completeness of any such information. CoinJar Europe Limited is authorised by the Central Bank of Ireland as a crypto-asset service provider (registration number C496731).

Share this:

On/Offchain

Your weekly dose of crypto news & opinion.

Join more than 150,000 subscribers to CoinJar's crypto newsletter.

Your information is handled in accordance with CoinJar’s Privacy Policy.

More from CoinJar Blog

Onchain: Is it all gambling now?
Opinion

Onchain: Is it all gambling now?

March 11, 2026All the major political events these days are but another reason to bet some money. Even AI agents are betting on crypto these days. Story One Alibaba's autonomous agent all...Read more
Onchain: In bad taste
Opinion

Onchain: In bad taste

February 25, 2026ICYMI, the tech bros have once again discovered taste, so get ready to be lectured by dudes who think it's acceptable to live with one ceiling light on what to wear and consume....Read more
Onchain: The selling continues
Opinion

Onchain: The selling continues

February 11, 2026Until morale improves, or so I hope.  Story One L2s are pointless Tweets the guy who advocated for them as part of the Ethereum scaling roadmap. Perhaps to deflect from his...Read more
CoinJar Logo
App storeApp store

Your information is handled in accordance with CoinJar’s Privacy Policy.

Warning: Past performance is not a reliable guide to future performance. If you invest in this product, you may lose some, or all, of the money you invest. The above information is not to be read as investment, legal or tax advice and takes no account of particular personal or market circumstances; all readers should seek independent investment, legal and tax advice before investing in cryptocurrencies. There are no government or central bank guarantees in the event something goes wrong with your investment. This information is provided for general information and/or educational purposes only. No responsibility or liability is accepted for any errors of fact or omission expressed therein. CoinJar Europe Limited makes no representation or warranty of any kind, express or implied, regarding the accuracy, validity, reliability, availability, or completeness of any such information.

CoinJar Europe Limited is authorised by the Central Bank of Ireland as a crypto-asset service provider (registration number C496731).

For more information on our regulatory status and the crypto-asset services we are authorised to provide, please see our official announcement and our MiCAR Disclosures page.

Apple Pay and Apple Watch are trademarks of Apple Inc. Google Pay is a trademark of Google LLC.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

CoinJar logo
CoinJarGet the app.
Install app