Awash in gasoline, US refiners export fuel at record pace

Awash in gasoline, US refiners export fuel at record pace copy

 

Bloomberg

The US has more gasoline than it knows what to do with. Exports have risen above imports for three consecutive weeks as recurring pipeline outages and higher production levels by refiners caused Gulf Coast inventories to grow. Typically a net importer of gasoline, the US has shipped a record amount of the motor fuel abroad and doesn’t show signs of stopping.
“Exports will have to be high to keep stocks under control,” Robert Campbell, head of oil products research at market consultant Energy Aspects Ltd. in New York, said in an e-mail. “Runs should be quite high on the US Gulf Coast in the coming weeks.”
The abundance of gasoline pushed Gulf Coast gasoline prices to an eight-month low last week and spurred
the longest losing streak since 2012
in futures, making US gasoline an
affordable buy. That has triggered some some unusual moves by refiners and traders.

OUT TO SEA
Independent refiner Valero Energy Corp. shipped excess supplies to Canada instead of Colombia and Phillips 66 sent the first gasoline shipment in 16 months to Egypt, according to shipping data and people familiar with the transactions. Oil trader Mercuria Energy Group is said to be storing a 60,000-ton parcel of gasoline blending components produced in India at an offshore site in the Bahamas.
More cargoes are sailing to typical destinations like Mexico and Brazil, George Los, senior tanker markets analyst at Charles R. Weber Co. in Greenwich, Connecticut, said in an e-mail.
“Lower refinery utilizations in Latin America, combined with abundant export capacity on the US Gulf, have made these trades attractive,” he said. “We have been seeing this for much of the year, where Latin America is absorbing the excess US gasoline.”

RECORD SHIPMENTS
Waterborne gasoline exports surged after Colonial Pipeline Co., the main system that moves Gulf Coast gasoline to the Eastern Seaboard, shut for six days following an Oct. 31 explosion. The outage, which backed up almost
8 million barrels of the motor fuel
that would normally flow to states in the Southeast and along the Atlantic coast, came less than two months after a pipeline leak triggered a 12-day one in September.
US gasoline exports reached 1.07 million barrels a day in the week ended Nov. 4, the first time the figure has topped 1 million in US Energy Information Administration data going back to 2010. ClipperData LLC, which tracks crude and products globally, also counted exports above 1 million barrels a day after the Colonial blast.
“We expected them to be strong in the aftermath of the Colonial Pipeline outage as gasoline inventories swell,” Matt Smith, ClipperData’s director of commodity research, said via e-mail from New York.

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