The Borneo Post

Asia’s weakening economies, traders wary of oversupply

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SINGAPORE: Oil traders’ worries over record supplies arriving in Asia just as the outlook for its key growth economies weakens have pulled down global crude benchmarks by a quarter since early October.

Ship-tracking data shows a record of more than 22 million barrels per day ( bpd) of crude oil hitting Asia’s main markets in November, up around 15 per cent since January 2017, and an increase of nearly five per cent since the start of this year.

Much of this oil was ordered ahead of US sanctions against Iran that were imposed this month, as refiners prepared for a sudden drop in supply.

But with unexpected­ly broad exemptions granted by Washington that allow Asia’s main oil consumers to continue buying crude from Iran, the overall supply drop has not materialis­ed.

Global supply has instead surged, led by soaring output from the world’s three-biggest producers – the United States, Russia and Saudi Arabia – who in October broke through joint output of 33 million bpd for the first time, meeting more than a third of total oil consumptio­n.

That surge has so far been met by healthy demand, not only in Asia’s main emerging economies of China and India, but also in the mature markets of Japan and South Korea.

Now, though, the rising supplies are threatenin­g to turn into a glut, triggering a 25 per cent sell- off in spot crude contracts since early October as financial traders pulled

Momentum still appears to be slowing across the region, reflecting a combinatio­n of tighter financial conditions and slowing global trade.

money out of oil markets.

Analysts warn the situation may get worse, with increasing signs of a slowdown across Asia’s biggest economies.

“Momentum still appears to be slowing across the region, reflecting a combinatio­n of tighter financial conditions and slowing global trade,” said Frederic Neumann, co-head of economic research for Asia at HSBC in Hong Kong.

China, Asia’s biggest economy, may see its first fall in car sales on record in 2018 as consumptio­n is stifled amid a trade war between Washington and Beijing.

In Japan, the economy contracted in the third quarter, hit by natural disasters but also by a decline in exports amid the rising protection­ism that is starting to take its toll on global trade.

In India, a plunging rupee has resulted in surging import costs, including for oil, stifling purchases in one of Asia’s biggest emerging markets.

India’s car sales are also set to register a fall this year.

“While over the past few months, the focus was on the Iran embargo and Venezuela’s output struggles, that is the risks of too little supply, the market now increasing­ly looks concerned about the prospects of too much supply,” said Norbert Ruecker, head of commodity research at Swiss bank Julius Baer.

“Hedge funds and other speculativ­e money have swiftly changed from the long to the short side,” he said.

As recently as September and October, leading oil traders and analysts were forecastin­g oil prices of US$ 90 or even US$ 100 a barrel by year- end.

Since then, there has been a dramatic shift in sentiment that has turned the entire forward curve for crude oil upside down. — Reuters

Frederic Neumann, HSBC Asia co-head of economic research

 ??  ?? Boats float in front of the VOPAK oil storage terminal in Johor, Malaysia. Ship-tracking data shows a record of more than 22 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude oil hitting Asia’s main markets in November, up around 15 per cent since January 2017, and an increase of nearly five per cent since the start of this year. — Reuters photo
Boats float in front of the VOPAK oil storage terminal in Johor, Malaysia. Ship-tracking data shows a record of more than 22 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude oil hitting Asia’s main markets in November, up around 15 per cent since January 2017, and an increase of nearly five per cent since the start of this year. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Employees work at a production line of lithium ion batteries inside a factory in Dongguan, Guangdong province, China. — Reuters photo
Employees work at a production line of lithium ion batteries inside a factory in Dongguan, Guangdong province, China. — Reuters photo

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