Oil
prices have bounced back after the last OPEC+ announcement sent them
crashing,
and the U.S. Federal Reserve could send them higher still with optimistic
messaging.
- Oil markets were
eagerly anticipating the start of peak driving season in the summer, but
gasoline demand so far has been mostly disappointing, with US
consumption
some 2% lower year-over-year.
- Asia has been the first continent where gasoline weakness led to
refinery run cuts, as a glut of light distillate supply has pushed
Singapore gasoline cracks below the $5 per barrel mark.
- While US gasoline cracks are notably higher than elsewhere, currently
around $22 per barrel, the high US refinery utilization rates create a lot
of downside for gasoline, especially as gasoline stocks are the highest
since 2021 for this time of the year.
- The pressure on gasoline might increase further down the line as this
year’s two main refinery newbuilds, Nigeria’s Dangote and Mexico’s Olmeca,
are both delayed and will not start up in time for the summer season.
Market Movers
- US refiner Phillips 66 (NYSE:PSX)
agreed to sell
its 25% stake in the Rockies Express Pipeline for some $1.28 billion
including debt to privately owned Tallgrass Energy which owns the
remaining 75% stake.
- Commodity trading giant Trafigura has
agreed to pay a
$55 million fine to settle charges of fraud and manipulation from the US
Commodity Futures Trading Commission, having traded misappropriated
Mexican gasoline.
- French oil major TotalEnergies (NYSE:TTE) sold its
Brunei upstream
business to
Malaysian exploration firm Hibiscus Petroleum for $260 million, using
those funds for further Namibia drilling.
Tuesday, June 18, 2024
Oil prices have gradually recouped all their losses following the OPEC+
meeting and ICE Brent has silently moved back to $84-85 per barrel,
without there being any notable change in fundamentals. Macroeconomics are
starting to feel better, however, and should the U.S. Fed comments this
week persuade the market that things will get better soon, the strength in
oil could be maintained for longer.
Chinese Refinery Runs Disappoint Again. Chinese
refinery output slid 1.8% year-over-year in May to 14.25 million b/d,
driven lower by
maintenance overhauls and shaky refining margins, with throughput in 2024
to date staying flat compared to the 2023 average of 14.48 million b/d.
Tensions Fly High in West Africa. Niger has shut
off oil
exports via the
1,240-mile pipeline connecting it to Benin’s coast, having loaded only one
cargo since its launch, after Benin arrested five Niger nationals for
allegedly entering the Seme loading terminal under false pretenses.
US States Defy White House’s Decommissioning Rules.
The states of Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi
sued the US
government to block the Biden administration’s proposed rules that require
offshore producers without sufficient reserves to provide some $7 billion
in decommissioning funds.
Russia Becomes Europe’s Largest Gas Supplier Again.
Overtaking the
United States, Russia has become the largest supplier of natural gas to
Europe despite having curbed pipeline deliveries to a trickle, accounting
for 14% of the continent’s imports in May.
Serbia Makes U-Turn on Lithium Mine. According
to media
reports,
Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic is readying to approve the development
of Europe’s largest lithium mine at the Jadar site in the west of the
country, two years after Belgrade called off Rio Tinto’s (ASX:RIO)
megaproject.
Saudi Arabia Hunts for Mining Deals in Chile.
Saudi Arabia’s mining minister Bandar al-Khorayef is
expected to
travel to Chile in July, as the Middle Eastern kingdom is nearing deals to
source lithium abroad and potentially enter Chile’s mining sector.
Singapore Offers Rebates for Oil Refiners. As
Singapore is
preparing to
launch its carbon tax scheme, with costs estimated at around $1 per barrel
of crude or a quarter of current refining margins, the city-state is
offering refiners rebates of up to 76% in 2024-2025 to remain competitive.
Chinese Solar Producers Beg for Government Intervention.
Chinese manufacturers of solar panels have
asked Beijing
for immediate government intervention to halt a plunge in prices of solar
cells and modules amidst rampant overcapacity, having already plunged 50%
last year.
UAE Eyes Rapid LNG Growth. Abu Dhabi’s state oil
firm ADNOC has taken a final investment decision on its 9.6 mtpa
liquefaction terminal in Ruwais, having already signed three 15-year term
supply
deals with
Germany’s SEFE and EnBW as well as China’s ENN Natural Gas.
Strikes Rattle Argentina’s Upstream Industry.
Sending shockwaves across Argentina’s prolific Vaca Muerta shale play, the
Latin American country’s oil union has called for
strikes this
week to demand higher salaries just as production in the country rose to
multi-year highs of 680,000 b/d.
Copper Prices Keep on Sliding Lower. As metals
markets were disappointed by China’s slowdown in industrial production
growth, as
attested by May
statistics published this week, copper prices traded on LME fell to their
lowest in eight weeks at $9,630 per metric tonne.
ExxonMobil One Step Closer to Nigeria Exit.
Nigerian upstream firm Seplat Energy
announced that
its agreed $1.28 billion purchase of ExxonMobil’s (NYSE:XOM)
shallow water assets in the country is no longer blocked by the state oil
producer NNPC, bringing closer the US major’s exit.
Shell Bets Big on LNG Expansion. UK-based energy
major Shell (LON:SHEL)
agreed to
purchase Singaporean LNG firm Pavilion Energy from investment firm Temasek,
taking over its 6.5 mtpa portfolio of long-term supply contracts and
fortifying its position as the world’s top gas trader.
Tom Kool
Editor, Oilprice.com
Green Play Ammonia™, Yielder® NFuel Energy.
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