East of Suez Market Update 4 Feb
Prices in East of Suez ports have moved up, and LSMGO availability is good across several Omani ports.
IMAGE: An aerial view of Sohar Port and Freezone. Sohar Port and Freezone
Changes on the day to 17.00 SGT (09.00 GMT) today:
- VLSFO prices up in Zhoushan ($18/mt), Singapore and Fujairah ($11/mt)
- LSMGO prices up in Fujairah ($20/mt), Zhoushan ($12/mt) and Singapore ($11/mt)
- HSFO prices up in Singapore, Fujairah and Zhoushan ($5/mt)
- B30-VLSFO prices up in Fujairah ($20/mt), and unchanged in Singapore
VLSFO prices across the three major Asian bunker ports have increased by $11–18/mt over the past day, with Zhoushan recording the steepest rise. Zhoushan’s VLSFO is now trading at premiums of $23/mt and $5/mt over Fujairah and Singapore, respectively.
Meanwhile, Fujairah’s LSMGO price has climbed by $20/mt, the largest increase among the three ports. A higher-priced LSMGO stem fixed in the port helped push the benchmark up. Fujairah’s LSMGO is currently quoted at premiums of $71/mt and $47/mt over Singapore and Zhoushan, respectively.
Prompt bunker supply in Fujairah remains tight across all fuel grades, with several suppliers operating on constrained delivery schedules. Most are still quoting lead times of 5–7 days, largely unchanged from last week, according to a source. Supply conditions are also tight at Khor Fakkan.
Across Oman’s ports—Sohar, Salalah, Muscat and Duqm—bunker availability remains stable, with suppliers consistently able to deliver LSMGO within prompt delivery windows.
Brent
The front-month ICE Brent contract has risen by $1.57/bbl on the day, to trade at $67.18/bbl at 17.00 SGT (09.00 GMT) today.
Upward pressure:
Brent futures have moved higher after the US shot down an Iranian drone and armed Iranian boats approached a US-flagged vessel in the Strait of Hormuz, reviving concerns over a possible escalation in tensions between Washington and Tehran.
“The market is back to pricing in the risk of a US-Iran military confrontation after two maritime encounters on Tuesday,” said Vandana Hari, founder of VANDA Insights.
“Crude oil gained… amid renewed geopolitical tensions,” Daniel Hynes, senior commodity strategist at ANZ Bank, echoed.
Additional support came from industry data pointing to a sharp decline in US crude inventories. US crude oil stocks fell by 11.1 million barrels in the week ending 30 January, according to American Petroleum Institute (API) estimates cited by Trading Economics.
Falling crude inventories are generally seen as a signal of stronger demand and can underpin Brent prices.
“The oil market got another boost from a bullish inventory report from the American Petroleum Institute,” two analysts from ING Bank said.
Furthermore, a trade agreement between the US and India has lifted expectations of stronger global energy demand.
“Prices were also supported by reports that as part of the US India trade deal, the US would roll back tariffs in return for an agreement that India would stop buying Russian oil,” ANZ Bank’s Daniel Hynes noted.
Downward pressure:
Meanwhile, the US government is preparing to issue, as early as this week, a general license that would allow companies to produce oil and gas in Venezuela, in a bid to encourage higher output from the OPEC member, Reuters reported citing sources.
The license, to be issued by the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, would permit companies to explore for and produce crude oil and natural gas, the report added. This prospect has weighed on Brent futures.
Additionally, crude oil production in the US has reportedly recovered following recent storm-related disruptions. By Monday, only about 100,000 b/d of US crude output remained shut, after extreme weather last month had cut supplies, with outages peaking at around 2 million b/d on 24 January, according to Reuters.
The easing of these disruptions has further contributed to downward pressure on oil prices.
By Tuhin Roy
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