US benchmark Nymex WTI crude futures fell back into negative territory this morning with the second-month contract also falling sharply.
The Nymex front-month May contract, which expires today, was trading at -$4.92/bl at around 8:30am ET, up by $32.71/bl from its close at -$37.63/bl yesterday. The June contract was down by about $4.30/bl to with trades just above $16/bl.
Ice Brent June was trading at around $20.90/bl, down by about $4.85/bl from yesterday.
"Any hopes that yesterday's market carnage would be a one-day story have been quickly extinguished as NYMEX reopens," said analysts at Rystad Energy.
The contagion has spilled over to WTI June 2020 deliveries, which could also be well on their way into the red as we move towards physical delivery dates. The analysts also said that Brent is not immune to a negative price possibility, but should be more resistant.
The May WTI futures contract had traded in positive territory earlier in the session before turning downward again.
The historic collapse of the WTI Nymex crude futures well into negative territory yesterday sent shockwaves across spot physical markets, in crude and beyond, resulting in a mix of negative outright prices, bloated differentials and total dislocations.
The May contract closed at -$37.63/bl yesterday, taking an unprecedented plummet into negative territory as rapidly filling US storage created a panic, prompting traders to unwind their positions.
US president Donald Trump downplayed the crash in the US oil benchmark as a function of "short sellers" and other traders speculating in the market.
The imminent expiry of the May WTI futures contract today has led to a significantly lower number of contracts changing hands.
The market is looking to the latest weekly US crude inventory and storage data by the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) due tomorrow. Storage at the Cushing, Oklahoma, hub is filling rapidly, rising by 16.5mn bl in the four weeks that ended 10 April, EIA data showed.

