The structure, known as backwardation, occurs when the front-month contract is at a premium to later-dated contracts and can indicate tightness in the market. It gives energy companies little incentive to pay to store their product for future months, but rather to sell while prices are firmer.
At the end of last week, the front-month contract was at roughly at 78 cent a barrel premium to the second month.
Prompt futures had been trading at a discount to future month contracts as recently as Feb. 8.
The WTI March contract expired on Monday.
(Reporting by Georgina McCartney in Houston; Editing by Liz Hampton)
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