The National - News

Iraq looks to revamp how it sells crude

▶ Contract traded on Dubai Mercantile Exchange under considerat­ion in bid for higher prices

-

Opec’s second-largest producer is stepping up the campaign to get more for its oil by looking to revamp the way it sells crude to its biggest customers.

Iraq is considerin­g plans to use a new reference price for sales to Asia, according to traders, who received a notice from the state oil company Somo. The producer is proposing to use a contract traded on the Dubai Mercantile Exchange as a benchmark for pricing Basrah crude, replacing the formula it currently uses along with competitor­s such as Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Iran.

As a persistent oversupply caps oil prices around US$50 per barrel and Opec’s output quotas limits production, Iraq is looking to squeeze every drop of value out of its crude. Somo has already sold its first ever cargo in a new auction system this year and is now looking to link sales to prices published by DME because it thinks the current mechanism undervalue­s the oil, according to industry consultant Energy Aspects.

“The Iraqis are probably looking at the high premiums paid for their oil that’s over and beyond their announced official prices, and recognisin­g that there’s money left on the table,” said Nevyn Nah, a Singapore-based analyst at Energy Aspects. “I’d say Somo is steps ahead of the rest of Middle East in its intention to capture their oil’s value, but the proposal needs some refinement and feedback from buyers.”

In the note to Asian buyers, Somo said it was considerin­g a benchmark based off the DME Oman contract two months before the Iraqi cargoes are scheduled to load, according to the traders.

That is a shift from the current practice of using the mean of Oman and Dubai crude prices in the loading month, which are published by S&P Global Platts. Somo has asked for customers’ feedback by tomorrow, according to the traders.

There are potential cost implicatio­ns for buyers under the proposed system. They would have to hedge the risk that prices will fluctuate in the time between the pricing month and the month of loading, and that represents an additional expense.

“There’s a huge flat-price exposure for refiners who lock in their Basrah crude price three to four months before the oil is refined into products, such as diesel, and sold,” Mr Nah said.

Most Asian refiners typically secure the profits from turning crude into fuel on the basis of benchmark Dubai and Brent crude.

If Iraq sells on the basis of DME Oman, refiners would also need to hedge against potential fluctuatio­ns in the spread between those reference prices, Mr Nah said.

While cargoes loading in any given month would be priced two months in advance, Somo typically only tells its customers whether they will be allocated a shipment about one month before it is scheduled to load. That means buyers potentiall­y will not know whether to hedge or not because they cannot be sure if they will be allocated a cargo.

It will also be hard to assess the competitiv­eness of Iraqi crude relative to rival oil from Saudi Arabia or Iran, because they will have different benchmarks and pricing months, according to Tushar Tarun Bansal, a director at Ivy Global Energy.

This month, Somo set the official price for Basrah Heavy exports to Asia at the smallest discount ever to Arab Heavy crude marketed by Saudi Arabian Oil Co, or Aramco.

The August official price of Basrah Light to Asia was at its widest premium to Arab Medium crude since 2012, indicating the rising price of the Iraqi grade versus its Saudi alternativ­e.

“While the proposed methodolog­y by Somo is a shift away from equations used by large producers like Saudi Arabia and Iran, it’s certainly a move in the right direction,” Mr Bansal said. “It’s a step toward a more sophistica­ted way of pricing oil, but still some distance away from a more liberalise­d market.”

The Iraqis are probably looking at the high premiums paid for their oil over and beyond their announced official prices NEVYN NAH Energy Aspects analyst

 ?? Reuters ?? The Iraqi state oil company Somo is examining a new reference price for Asian sales with a DME contract used as a benchmark for Basrah crude
Reuters The Iraqi state oil company Somo is examining a new reference price for Asian sales with a DME contract used as a benchmark for Basrah crude

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates