Global Physical Crude Markets Mired in Discounts as Middle East Ramps Up Supply

Crude Oil Shipments In The Persian Gulf

(Reuters) – Physical crude oil cargoes are selling at discounts across the globe, changing trade flows as markets come under pressure from fast-rising Middle Eastern supply with Iran set to boost sales following a temporary reprieve from U.S. sanctions. The steep drop in prices follows the 60-day interim deal between the U.S. and Iran to end the war that started on February 28, allowing some shipping to resume in the Strait of Hormuz which used to see a fifth of the global oil and liquefied natural gas shipments before the war.

Tehran is also ramping up oil exports, seeking sales beyond China, after Washington temporarily lifted sanctions as part of the deal. The release of cargoes stranded inside the Gulf and a wave of crude offers from Abu Dhabi National Oil Co, Kuwait Petroleum Corp and Iraq’s SOMO have also boosted prompt supply and depressed Middle East benchmarks Dubai, Oman and Murban to discounts. Asian refiners, which typically buy crude two months in advance, have already booked cargoes for delivery up to August.


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“Refineries in the East have already been well supplied for the next two months and have no need for the incremental barrels, leading to a very weak market and Dubai spreads in contango,” said June Goh, a senior oil market analyst at Sparta Commodities.

MIDDLE EASTERN BENCHMARKS IN DISCOUNTS

Cash Dubai slipped to a discount of 27 cents a barrel on Tuesday, after peaking at more than $60 in March, while discounts for Oman and Murban widened to 96 cents and 67 cents, respectively, Reuters data showed.

Prompt cargoes trade at a discount to later-dated ones in a contango market, indicating ample supplies. ADNOC sold at least 48 million barrels of spot crude so far this month for June-August loading, boosting regional supply. The collapse in Middle Eastern crude prices has made Gulf oil cheaper against Brent, enabling energy majors Exxon Mobil, Eni and TotalEnergies to send supertankers of crude such as Abu Dhabi’s Murban and Upper Zakum to Europe, traders said.

On the other hand, weak Middle East prices have shut the arbitrage window for Atlantic Basin crude to Asia, traders said. Spot differential for U.S. West Texas Intermediate Midland crude has flipped from a premium a week ago to a discount of about 45 cents.

“We’re expecting U.S. crude export premiums to Asia to erode and AB (Atlantic Basin) differentials to soften as the weeks progress,” Rystad analyst Janiv Shah said. U.S. crude exports to Asia are set to ease in the third quarter after hitting a record high of 2.634 million barrels per day in May, ship tracking data from Kpler showed.

EUROPE, WEST AFRICA DISCOUNTS WIDEN

Discounts for European and West African grades have also widened this week with the increase in Middle East supply.

North Sea Forties crude, one of the six grades that can set the value of the dated Brent benchmark, traded on Monday at a discount of $1 a barrel to dated Brent, the lowest since November and sharply down from a record premium of $21.50 a barrel in April, according to LSEG data.

“Europe is becoming the clearing point for crude that either lost its eastern outlet or now screens cheap enough to travel west,” analysts at Kpler said in a note.

For West African grades, Eni has sold Angolan Nemba crude for August loading to Glencore at $7.95 a barrel below dated Brent while ExxonMobil offered a cargo of Angolan Hungo for loading on August 6-7 at a discount of $4.05 per barrel to dated Brent, traders said. Pricing agency S&P Global Energy Platts assessed on Tuesday that Congolese crude Djeno was at a discount of $10.80 per barrel to dated Brent, the lowest in a record dating back to 2013. Angola’s Nemba was priced at a six-year low discount of $8 per barrel, it added.

Reporting by Siyi Liu and Florence Tan in Singapore; Seher Dareen in London; Additional reporting by Robert Harvey in London; Editing by Kate Mayberry

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