Business World

Oil shipping rates from US to Asia hits three-year high, quieting November trade

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HOUSTON/NEW YORK — Freight rates for US crude tankers bound for Asia were bid up to a more than three-year peak this week as US sanctions on a Chinese transport giant cut vessel availabili­ty, traders and ship brokers said.

The United States last week imposed sanctions on two units of China’s COSCO, which operates more than 50 supertanke­rs, alleging the units violated US sanctions on Iran. That action prompted US Gulf Coast exporters to hold back chartering COSCO-owned vessels, traders and ship brokers said.

This week, suggested rates for Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCCs) from the US Gulf Coast to China vaulted to $9.8 million, up from $6.2 million in early September, according to ship broker McQuilling Services. VLCCs carry around two million barrels apiece.

“To attract a ship to ballast (into the Atlantic market) it’s going to cost about $10 million” for US Gulf Coast shipments bound for China or South Korea, said another US ship broker who brokers about 20 vessels per month.

Friday’s highest quote was for $9.5 million to book a VLCC from the US Gulf Coast to China for charterer Atlantic Trading & Marketing, a unit of Total SA, ship brokers said. The deal did not go through, they added. Atlantic Trading declined to comment.

No other transactio­ns for supertanke­rs from the US Gulf Coast to Asia have been executed this week, ship brokers said.

The surge in freight costs has narrowed the window to profitably export US crude to Asia and left some US crude exporters reluctant to book vessels at the higher rates. That could limit November loadings and exports unless more vessels become available in coming weeks, traders said.

“People are nervous about locking freight in at these high levels, which is why the last week has been so quiet,” one US crude oil trader said.

Occidental Petroleum Corp. last week replaced a COSCOopera­ted supertanke­r, Coswish Lake, following the US sanctions, by chartering smaller vessels from Texas to destinatio­ns in Asia, ship brokers said.

The Coswish Lake had anchored off Corpus Christi, Texas, since Sept. 23 and departed on Sunday without loading crude, according to Refinitiv Eikon data.

Occidental did not respond to requests for comment. —

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REUTERS

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