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What Is Oilshare?

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Vegetable oil market prices including Soybean Oil futures have experienced significant strength in recent years, affecting the price relationship between soybean oil and the other component of processing soybeans, soybean meal. Many market participants that may not be familiar with the Soybean Oil futures market may have heard the term oilshare, used to describe soybean oil prices relative to soybean meal prices in the agricultural press. This paper describes what oilshare is and how it is calculated.

Soybean crushing is the process of crushing whole soybeans and producing soybean meal and soybean oil. Soybean meal is used as a high-protein animal feed, while soybean oil is a vegetable oil used in various food, fuel and industrial applications. Since both soybean oil and soybean meal are outputs from the soybean crush, many market participants evaluate soybean oil prices relative to soybean meal prices.

Comparing soybean oil and soybean meal prices is difficult because Soybean Oil futures are priced as cents per pound while Soybean Meal futures are priced as dollars per short ton. To overcome this difficulty, the industry evaluates Soybean Oil futures prices as a percentage of the soybean crush, which is the revenue received from selling both soybean oil and soybean meal. That is, the relationship between Soybean Oil futures and Soybean Meal futures is measured as soybean oil’s share of the soybean crush, (i.e., oilshare).

When a bushel of soybeans weighing 60 pounds is crushed, the conventional result is 11 pounds of soybean oil, 44 pounds of 48 percent protein soybean meal, four pounds of hulls and one pound of waste. The common method to compare soybean oil prices directly with soybean meal is to convert the Soybean Oil futures price to the price per 11 pounds and convert the Soybean Meal futures price to the price per 44 pounds since these are the outputs from crushing one bushel of soybeans.

While the Soybean Oil futures price is officially quoted as cents per pound, it can also be interpreted as the price in dollars per hundredweight – that is a price of 60.00 is officially 60 cents per pound but can also be interpreted as $60 per hundredweight. Multiplying this price by 0.11 (11 // 100) converts the price of Soybean Oil futures from the price per 100 pounds to the price per 11 pounds. For example, a Soybean Oil futures price of 48.16 cents per pound is equivalent to $48.16 per hundredweight. Multiplying this by 0.11 results in a Soybean Oil price of ($48.16 x 0.11) = $5.30 per 11 pounds. That is, the soybean oil revenue for crushing one bushel of soybeans is $5.30.