Aramco raises crude pricing to US, Asia on increased demand

Haradh, SAUDI ARABIA:  A general view shows a new plant inaugurated 22 March 2006 in Haradh, about 280 kms (170 miles) southwest of the eastern Saudi oil city of Dhahran, launching a project adding 300,000 barrels of oil to the kingdom's daily production capacity. The facility which was opened today in a ceremony attended by Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Nuaimi was completed in January, ahead of schedule, the company said. Approximately 160 kms (100 miles) of new pipeline and extensions will transport crude and gas products to processing facilities further north in the Eastern Province, a statement said. Saudi Arabia, the world's top crude producer and exporter, currently pumps around 9.5 million bpd of oil and has a production capacity of around 11 million bpd.  AFP PHOTO/STR  (Photo credit should read -/AFP/Getty Images)

Bloomberg

Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter, raised pricing for July sales of all crude grades to Asia, the US and Northwest Europe as it seeks to take advantage of increased demand after suppliers extended production cuts to help curb a global glut.
State-owned Saudi Arabian Oil Co., known as Saudi Aramco, increased official pricing for Arab Light crude to Asia by 60 cents, to 25 cents a barrel less than the regional benchmark, it said in an emailed statement.
The company had been expected to increase the grade’s pricing by 30 cents a barrel for buyers in its largest market, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of five refiners and traders. Aramco boosted pricing due to higher demand and better profits for refiners in the region, according to a person with knowledge of the situation.
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and partners including Russia agreed May 25 to extend production cuts for another nine months to reduce global inventories. Saudi Arabia’s Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih said the cuts, initially meant to last through June, are working and predicted global inventories will fall to the five-year average in early 2018. But American drillers continue to add rigs to shale fields. Brent crude prices have dropped 12 percent this year.
“This is an indication that the Saudis see market conditions improving across the board,” said Robin Mills, head of Dubai-based consultancy Qamar Energy. “Demand is generally weaker in the first-quarter and picks up in summer.”

DEFENDING SALES
Saudi Aramco had cut Arab Light pricing to Asia for the past three months as the kingdom fought to defend sales. It had ceded market share to OPEC rivals Iran and Iraq by making deeper cuts in output than it promised under the group’s agreement to curb production.
Middle Eastern producers also compete with cargoes from Latin America, North Africa and Russia for buyers
in Asia. Producers in the Persian Gulf region sell mostly under long-term contracts to refiners and most of the Gulf’s state oil companies price their crude at a premium or discount to
a benchmark. For Asia the benchm-ark is the average of Oman and Dubai oil grades.
US pricing by Aramco has increased for three consecutive months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Saudi Arabia plans to “markedly” reduce exports to the US in the next few weeks in an effort to reduce crude inventories in the world’s biggest consumer. “Exports to the US will drop measurably,” Al-Falih told reporters in Vienna after the OPEC agreement on May 25.
The July pricing doesn’t provide “any evidence of that strategy” given that Aramco raised pricing across several markets, Mills said. Saudi crude is needed by refiners in the Gulf of Mexico for blending with lighter shale oil produced in the US, he said.

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