U.S. Oil Boom Pushing Transportation ETF | ETF Trends

The U.S. oil boom has helped business flow through railways, lifting transportation sector-related exchange traded funds. However, if oil prices continue to fall, railway companies can also suffer.

Year-to-date, the iShares Transportation Average ETF (NYSEArca: IYT) increased 24.1% and SPDR S&P Transportation ETF (NYSEArca: XTN) gained 29.7%.

IYT includes a 25.9% tilt toward the railroad and XTN has a 12.0% position in the sub-sector.

Crude oil sold at the wellhead in Bakken shale region across North Dakota dipped to $49.7 per barrel on November 28, revealing how geographic and logistical issues can cause disparate prices in areas where new shale plays have pushed U.S. oil product to a 31-year high, reports Dan Murtaugh for Bloomberg.

“You have gathering fees, trucking, terminalling, pipeline and rail fees,” Andy Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates LLC, said in the article. “If you’re selling at the wellhead, you’re getting a very low number relative to WTI.”

In comparison, West Texas Intermediate crude oil futures were hovering around $67.3 per barrel Wednesday.

Consequently, in order to turn a profit, more drillers are turning to railways to ship oil to large hubs for distribution. Tank carloads of crude are up 50% so far this year, compared to 2014, according to Pacific Standard Magazine.

However, if crude oil prices continue to weaken, railways may no longer be an option. For instance, in places with limited pipeline capacity, producers have to fill rail cars with crude and pay $10 to $15 per barrel to bring oil thousands of miles or more to the coasts for processing.