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31 May 2010
Fuel oil shipments to Singapore may increase as much as 10 percent next month as prices rise in Asia, encouraging exports from Western Europe, Russia and the U.S. Gulf of Mexico. Asia’s demand for fuel oil, the residual waste from refining that’s used to
generate electricity and power ships, is being driven by Middle East
utilities providing power for air- conditioning and a recovery in
shipping as the global recession eases. The additional cargoes in
Singapore may cap fuel oil’s gain against crude, known as the crack
spread, the traders said.
“The key to predict fuel oil prices for the coming months is power
companies’ demand in the Middle East,” said Yasuhito Imaizumi, a
Singapore-based bunker trading manager at Petro Summit Pte, a subsidiary
of Sumitomo Corp. “The market will be quite sensitive to activities
among Middle Eastern power companies in the run-up to summer season.”
The discount of Singapore 180-centistoke high-sulfur fuel oil, the Asian
benchmark, to Dubai crude oil was $5.44 a barrel yesterday, narrowing
about 40 percent this month because of reduced shipments compared with
April.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia, which burns crude and fuel oil for power generation, may
use more fuel oil this summer after the average price of New York crude
futures so far this year rose 67 percent from a year earlier.
BP Plc, Statoil ASA and Litasco, the trading unit of OAO Lukoil,
Russia’s largest non-state producer, hired Very Large Crude Carriers to
load European fuel oil for next month’s delivery to Singapore, according
to reports from three shipbrokers. Supertankers Gemini Glory, Front
Commander and Kazimah III were chartered for as much as $5 million.
Rates on the route were about $4.25 million in April and $3.9 million in
March.
ConocoPhillips, Trafigura Beheer BV and PowerSeraya Ltd. have booked
three more VLCCs to load fuel oil in early June from the U.S. Gulf or
the Caribbean for delivery to Singapore, shipbrokers said.
Russian Shipments
Shipments of Russian straight-run fuel oil, used to feed
vacuum-distillation units at refineries, may increase in June, two
traders said. Straight-run fuel oil is a residue that comes directly
from crude distillation.
“These ex-Russia cargoes might be diverted to Singapore from the U.S. in
June as run rates at U.S. refineries fell,” said Akira Kamiyama, a
Tokyo-based trader at Mitsui & Co.
Refinery utilization rates in the U.S., the world’s largest energy
consumer, have fallen three straight weeks after reaching 89.6 percent
of capacity, the highest since May 2008. Run rates were at 87.8 percent
in the week ended May 21, the Energy Department said yesterday.
The premium of 180-centistoke fuel oil to 380-centistoke grade, also
known as the viscosity spread, has tumbled 84 percent so far this month
to $1.75 a ton because of increased demand from ship owners that use
lower-quality bunker.
“The recent drop in fuel oil prices stimulated ship owners appetite for
bunker fuel,” Imaizumi said.
Bunker Fuel
Singapore 380-centistoke bunker fuel has fallen 16 percent in May,
Bloomberg data show. Sales in the city-state, the world’s largest
bunkering port, rose to a record 3.42 million tons in April, up 2.7
percent from the previous month, according to data compiled by the
Maritime and Port Authority. Sales were up 19 percent from a year
earlier.
Increased supplies of blending stock, used to reduce the viscosity of
fuel oil, also accelerated the momentum of narrowing the spread.
Fuel oil’s viscosity spread rose to a 15-month high of $13.50 a ton on
March 10 on increased shipments of high- viscosity fuel oil from Europe
and a shortage of blending grades from the U.S.
The premium of Asia’s benchmark gasoil to Dubai crude oil has gained 65
percent so far this year to $10.14 a barrel on May 26, data compiled by
Bloomberg show.
Traders forecast the viscosity spread will widen next month because
refiners produce less blending material when they produce more gasoil.
“Given the good gasoil crack, viscosity spread should widen to $10 a
ton,” Mitsui’s Kamiyama said.
Source: Bloomberg