Arab Times

Platts mulls Asia crude liquidity boost via new grades

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SINGAPORE, Aug 19, (RTRS): Oil pricing agency Platts is looking at approving more Middle East crude grades to boost liquidity in the daily assessment of Asia’s Dubai benchmark, company executives said on Wednesday.

Monthly volumes have twice hit records in the past year, raising concerns that cargoes that can be delivered over Platts’ pricing mechanism may have hit an upper limit.

Also, record daily Dubai crude trades by two Chinese state companies this month have pushed the benchmark higher, even as other grades are pressed lower by a global glut.

Output of Dubai, Oman and Upper Zakum — the grades approved for delivery during the Platts Market on Close (MoC) process — is 1.6 million barrels per day (bpd) but the volume that can be freely traded is about 1.2 million bpd, traders said.

That is far smaller in comparison with even just China’s refining throughput as Sinopec alone can process close to 5 million bpd and PetroChina nearly 3 million bpd, they said.

“The key issue is the benchmark’s liquidity,” a North Asian crude trader said. “We keep hitting new records, it shows that we have hit the limit.”

Platts said it is looking at adding new grades into the Dubai mechanism, including Qatar’s al-Shaheen and Qatar Marine, Abu Dhabi’s Murban and Iraq’s Basra Light. Approving any one of the crudes would add between 200,000 bpd and 2 million bpd to the Dubai basket volume.

“Qatar Marine and al-Shaheen are strong contenders to be added to the Dubai mechanism as they are very good fits,” said Dave Ernsberger, global oil director at Platts.

Platts previously had talks with customers in 2011 over the addition of Qatar Marine to the Dubai basket due to worries about Oman supply disruption, but nothing was implemente­d.

Platts is also looking at more locations for ship-to-ship (STS) transfers to increase liquidity, said Jonty Rushforth, editorial director for Asia and Middle East oil markets.

The company has started accepting the delivery of Upper Zakum via ship-toship (STS) transfer from an Aframax tanker in Abu Dhabi, and that could add 2-3 cargoes this month, the executives said.

“We are happy to review other ships (for STS loadings) at other locations,” Rushforth said. OSLO, Aug 19, (AFP): The world’s biggest sovereign wealth fund, Norway’s public pension fund, reported Wednesday its first negative quarterly return in three years, pulled down by the bond market. The fund posted a -0.9 percent return. Bonds, which represent 34.5 percent of its investment portfolio, yielded a negative return of 2.2 percent in the second quarter said Norway’s central bank, which manages the fund.

“The return on fixed-income investment­s was affected by an increase in yields in the fund’s main markets,” fund director Yngve Slyngstad said in a statement.

As of June 30, at the end of a quarter that Slyngstad called “relatively calm,” the fund was worth 6.89 trillion kroner (753 billion euros, $830.6 billion).

Stocks, which account for 62.8 percent of its portfolio, registered a negative return of 0.2 percent, while real estate investment­s, which account for 2.7 percent of the portfolio, saw their value rise by two percent.

“On the equity side, US stocks pulled down the result,” Slyngstad said.

The fund receives its investment money from Norway’s huge oil and gas revenues and is intended to pay for future generation­s in the welfare-state after the country’s oil wells run dry.

Among the biggest transactio­ns during the second quarter, the fund invested 17.9 billion in a 45 percent stake in a portfolio of industrial properties spread across the United States.

The Norwegian state deposited 12 billion kroner into the fund’s coffers in the second quarter, a sign that oil prices rebounded compared to the three months of the year, when it deposited just five billion.

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