Arab Times

Saudi Arabia tries to drain excess crude oil

Safeguards customers

-

John Kemp is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed are his own. — Editor

S

audi Arabia faces a difficult balancing act as it tries to work down excess global crude stocks while protecting relationsh­ips with important refining customers in the United States and Asia.

Saudi Aramco exports most of its crude direct to refiners under long-term contracts that prohibit resale to other refiners or independen­t traders.

Aramco’s business has been built around nurturing strategic relationsh­ips with customers and emphasisin­g its reliabilit­y as a supplier.

The model is very different from most other OPEC and non-OPEC producers that rely more heavily on spot sales to refiners and traders.

Aramco’s strategic relationsh­ips and term contracts help it realise value in the long run but reduce its flexibilit­y in the short term.

And Saudi Arabia’s commitment to reduce production under the accord with other OPEC and non-OPEC countries reached towards the end of 2016 creates a tension with its customer-focused strategy.

The kingdom has an obvious interest in reducing excessive global crude stockpiles in an attempt to push oil prices higher.

Fact

In fact, Aramco has so far cut production even more than required under the OPEC/non-OPEC agreement to accelerate the rebalancin­g process.

But Aramco is also keen to protect is preferenti­al-supplier status with refiners across Asia and the United States which means protecting volumes as far as possible.

Contracts with refiners contain some limited flexibilit­y to vary the volume supplied each month which allows for some adjustment.

But Saudi Arabia does not want to cut its own supply if the shortfall will simply be made up by increases from other exporters producing similar crude oils.

Iran, Iraq, Oman and Russia all produce medium and heavy sour crudes with similar characteri­stics to Saudi crude.

For that reason, the kingdom insisted they were all bound by production limits in the OPEC/non-OPEC agreement.

But even with the OPEC/non-OPEC agreement, it is still difficult to cut exports without leaving important customers disappoint­ed and looking for alternativ­es.

The challenge is how to cut output without reducing exports too much.

One option is to cut domestic consumptio­n, which the kingdom has been doing by increasing gas production and reducing crude consumptio­n in its power plants.

The problem is that a reduction in direct domestic crude consumptio­n is equivalent to an increase in global oil supply and makes the rebalancin­g process slower.

Another option is to run down domestic crude stockpiles, though that is obviously unsustaina­ble in the long term.

Saudi Arabia cut production by 482,000 barrels per day (bpd) in January 2017 compared with the same month a year earlier, according to government figures supplied to the Joint Organisati­ons Data Initiative.

But exports were cut by only 122,000 bpd compared with the same month in 2016, according to JODI data, which is likely one reason that OECD crude stocks have been slow to fall.

Direct crude consumptio­n by the power sector fell by around 40,000 bpd while refinery intake was reduced by around 340,000 bpd.

Stocks

Even so, domestic crude stocks fell by almost 11 million barrels in January. Stocks have fallen in 13 of the last 14 months by a total of 67 million barrels as exports and domestic consumptio­n have outstrippe­d production

The drawdown in January was the second-largest in the last five years and was obviously unsustaina­ble for any length of time.

In response, the kingdom boosted production by 263,000 bpd in February, which left output just 209,000 bpd below year-earlier levels, according to government data supplied directly to OPEC.

But the independen­t assessors surveyed by OPEC reported output declined by a further 90,000 bpd, a discrepanc­y that prompted the Saudi energy ministry to issue a rare clarificat­ion:

“The difference between what the market observers as production, and the actual supply levels in any given month, is due to operationa­l factors that are influenced by storage adjustment­s and other month to month variables.”

Saudi Arabia expects its crude oil supply to be stable at around 10 million barrels per day in the next few months, fully in line with the country’s OPEC quota and regardless of possible fluctuatio­ns in monthly production, industry sources told Reuters on Thursday.

Saudi Arabia’s internal consumptio­n is set to rise significan­tly in the months ahead as its refineries complete scheduled maintenanc­e and direct crude burn in the power sector increases in the summer months.

If production remains unchanged, the volume available for export should decline during the second and third quarters of 2017, which would help drain global crude stocks and tighten the market.

Many oil traders have been assuming a sharp drop in Saudi exports, which is one reason why calendar spreads from June onwards have narrowed significan­tly. But any reduction in exports would leave refiners in Asia and the US. Gulf Coast short of feedstock and hunting for Russian and other Gulf crudes to fill the gap.

Rising domestic crude consumptio­n will sharpen the tension between Saudi Arabia’s price-management and customer-relationsh­ip objectives.

It will also test the newfound solidarity among OPEC and non-OPEC producers as they try to coordinate to drain stockpiles while also competing to protect market shares. (RTRS)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait