Crack Spread

The CRACK spread study is a futures transaction that parallels the process of refining Light Crude Oil (CL or RCL) or Brent Crude Oil (SC, LBC, or RSC) into petroleum products, such as Heating Oil or Gas Oil (HO or LGO) and Unleaded Gas (HU or RHU). Since the refining process involves "cracking" crude oil into its major components, the spread is referred to as a crack. Two of the major oil products produced in refineries are heating oil and unleaded gasoline. Therefore, the CRACK spread only involves crude oil (CL), unleaded gasoline (HU), and heating oil (HO).

 

A CRACK Spread may be added to a chart without plotting a symbol.

 

  1. Click the Chart button on the QuickStart toolbar.

    OR

    Press F2.

    OR

    From the File menu, select New Window, then select Chart.
    Result
    : An empty chart window is displayed.
     

  2. From the Study menu, select one of the CRACK Spreads.
    Result
    : The chart is created.

 

The basic calculation is a simple one that is made somewhat more complicated because the quantities are given in different units. These units for crude oil (CL), unleaded gasoline (HU), and heating oil (HO) must be converted to the divisor unit. For example, CL is quoted in dollars per barrel, but HO and HU are both quoted in dollars per gallon - HO and HU must be converted to gallons, this is done by multiplying their prices by 42 (1 barrel = 42 gallons).

 

The price of each leg of the spread is then multiplied by the number of contracts for each leg (the default number of contracts for Crack Spreads is a 1-2-3 ratio). The cost of the crude oil is subtracted from the cost of the products, and the result is divided by the number of contracts of crude oil. This results in the following expression:

 

- %CL * 3 + %HU * 2 * 42 + %HO * 1 * 42

 

The defaults for the other contracts used in the study are based on the Crack study plotted.  The study uses the same month/year for the 2nd and 3rd legs as is used for the charted symbol. If the charted instrument is a continuation symbol, the study uses continuation symbols for the 2nd and 3rd legs, by default. See examples in the table below.

 

Crack Spread

1st Leg

2nd Leg

3rd Leg

CL

CL1!

HU1!

HO1!

RCL

RCL1!

RHU1!

RHO1!

LBC

LBC1!

 HU1!

LGO1!

SC

SC1!

HU1!

HO1!

RSC

RSC1!

RHU1!

RHO1!

 

*Note: "1!" = front month.  If the month/year of the 1st leg symbol is not available for the 2nd or 3rd leg, the next available contract is used.  For example, if the charted symbol is RCLZ3 and RHUX3 does not exist, RHUZ3 will be used instead.

 

If the charted symbol is a CL, RCL, SC, or RSC symbol, the default numbers of contracts for the Crack study are 3, 2, and 1.  If the charted symbol is LBC, the default numbers of contracts for the Crack study are 1, 0, and 1.  The number of contracts can be changed via the study Properties dialog box.

 

Multipliers are as follows:

 

Contract

Multiplier

Description

HU,RHU

42

 42 gallons per barrel

HO, RHO

42

42 gallons per barrel

LGO

0.134336

.134336 metric tons per barrel

 

Intraday charts are legal only if the session times of the various legs match.

 

Interpretation

 

The CRACK study is similar to the CRUSH spread used for soybean. The combined value of heating oil and unleaded gasoline must exceed the crude oil price by more than the refining production costs. The most common ratio for the CRACK spread is 1-2-3. Three barrels of crude will produce two barrels of unleaded gasoline, and one barrel of heating oil. However, you are allowed to use other ratios when calculating the spread.

The CRACK spread results may be affected by the seasons. For instance, during the summer months, unleaded gasoline (HU) is in greater demand than heating oil (HO). During the winter months, the demand will shift to heating oil.

 

If a spread was too narrow to produce a refining profit, you could assume product prices would have to rise to catch up to crude oil prices. Therefore, you would favor heating oil and gasoline contracts over crude oil.

 

On the other hand, if there is a large spread between product and crude prices, you could assume refiners would push production and selling of unleaded gasoline and heating oil to take advantage of the profit. This increase in selling would tend to push product prices lower. Therefore, you would favor the crude oil over heating oil and gasoline.