Valero: After Incredible Run, 3 Reasons It Could Be Time To Take Profit On Shares

 | Apr 19, 2022 10:07

This post was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Shares fell to $31 in March 2020
  • Higher lows and higher highs over past two years
  • VLO all-time high is $126.98
  • Now could be a perfect time to take profit on VLO
  • Risk-reward no longer favors the upside

In crude oil and oil product markets, crack spreads are the refining margin for processing a barrel of crude oil into gasoline or distillate products such as heating oil, diesel, and jet fuel.

Refiners do not take a risk on the prices of oil or oil products. They purchase petroleum at prior pricing if they can and sell the refined oil products at current market prices. The refineries invest millions or, in some cases, billions in plant, property, and equipment to process oil. Meanwhile, they bear the risk of the spreads between crude oil prices and the ultimate price of oil products—this difference is known as crack spreads.

Crude oil is processed in a catalytic cracker that heats the petroleum to temperatures that create gasoline and distillate fuels. While crack spreads are real-time indicators of the demand for oil products, they also serve as barometers for refinery profits.

In 2020, when the price of crude oil and oil products fell as the COVID pandemic gripped the energy complex, the distillate crack spread fell to $6.44 per barrel, the lowest price since 2010. Gasoline processing spreads dropped to negative $3.85 per barrel, the lowest level since 2008. At those prices, refining crude oil into distillate products was a losing proposition.

However, since the 2020 lows, refining spreads have made a massive comeback, resulting in profits flowing back into the refinery business. Valero Energy Corporation (NYSE:VLO), a leading US refining company, has benefited. Over the past two years, I've been very bullish on the prospects for VLO shares.

But in mid-April 2022, I've come to believe now is an excellent time to take profit on long VLO positions as the risk-reward no longer favors the upside.

h2 Shares fell to $31 in March 2020/h2

In early 2020, the global pandemic caused energy demand to evaporate as people worldwide sheltered inside their homes. Workplaces were shut down and travel ground to a halt. Nearby NYMEX WTI crude oil price dropped to negative $40.32 per barrel, the lowest price since futures trading began, as there was no storage capacity for the landlocked petroleum.

Nearby seaborne Brent crude oil futures dropped to $16 per barrel, the lowest level this century. Gasoline reached a low of 37.6 cents per gallon wholesale.

Refining companies involved in processing crude oil into distillates suffered. Valero shares reached a low of $31 in March 2020, the lowest price for the stock since December 2012. Five months earlier, in November 2019, VLO shares were over the $100 level. 

h2 Higher lows and higher highs over past two years/h2
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At the $31 level during March 2020, VLO turned out to be the bargain of the century.