Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

China seen ready to pick up slack as oil demand wavers

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As a rampant coronaviru­s ravages Europe and the U.S. and raises the risk of more lockdown measures, a range of indicators suggests China can cushion oil markets from the worst of the potential demand destructio­n.

Stockpiles of crude and particular­ly fuels such as diesel and gasoline in the world’s biggest oil importer have shrunk over the past couple of months as economic activity exceeded expectatio­ns. Against this backdrop, one of China’s biggest state-owned refiners said it will keep crude throughput at its plants steady for the rest of the year.

The nation’s independen­ts — accounting for around a quarter of refining capacity — also look set for a revival. While buying by the so-called teapots has dropped since July, it’s expected to pick up again after import quotas for next year were raised. Weak margins remain a concern, however, although authoritie­s have reactivate­d a minimum fuelprice mechanism that should help safeguard the processors and encourage more buying.

While news of a potential virus vaccine breakthrou­gh spurred a surge in oil prices last week, the demand outlook over the Northern Hemisphere winter still looks pretty shaky.

China’s crude stockpiles

started growing in early February as the pandemic crippled the economy, and got a further boost a few months later from a flurry of buying to take advantage of the crash in global prices. The inventorie­s are coming down now, however, which means refiners will have some leeway to import more without worrying about storage constraint­s.

Stockpiles peaked at 914 million barrels, or 73% of capacity, in the week to Oct. 2, according to Ursa Space Systems, a company that uses synthetic aperture radar to track 39 oil storage sites in China. They’ve since fallen to 885 million barrels, or 71% of capacity, in the week through Nov. 5.

The magnitude of the drop in fuel inventorie­s looks even more encouragin­g. Gasoline and diesel stockpiles peaked at 71.14% and 60.67% of capacity, respective­ly, in the week through Sept. 4, according to Oilchem, a Chinese energy and petrochemi­cal informatio­n provider that’s part of Mysteel Group. They’ve since shrunk to 53.91% and 50.72% at the end of October.

The flurry of buying by teapots helped global oil prices recover rapidly after their plunge in April. Purchases have been slowing since around the middle of the year, though, with congestion at ports holding up deliveries and the independen­t refineries running low on import quota.

The Ministry of Commerce’s announceme­nt last week that it would raise the quota for next year by more than 20% came as welcome news to the market. Oil traders had already been buying up cargoes since early October and sending them toward China, in anticipati­on of an uptick in purchases for 2021.

Weak refining margins are a source of vulnerabil­ity in the Chinese oil demand picture, however. After rising as high as $176.82 a ton in late April, teapot profits then dropped rapidly and have been hovering around zero since the middle of the year, according to data from consultant Energy Aspects.

Chinese authoritie­s said earlier this month that they would reintroduc­e a floor-price mechanism that will hold fuel prices at a level that’s the equivalent of $40 a barrel crude. The measure aided margins and helped drive buying earlier in the year when oil prices crashed.

The nation’s refining heavyweigh­ts — China Petroleum & Chemical Corp. and PetroChina Co. — also look set to do their bit to aid global demand. China is on track to import 550 million tons of crude this year, around 10% more than 2019, China Petroleum & Chemical, also known as Sinopec, said Nov. 8.

PetroChina said in midOctober that it wouldn’t cut overall throughput at its refiners in the fourth quarter. Sinopec is on track to reach its 2020 full-year refining target of 241 million tons, said an official at the company’s press office. That would mean fourth quarter throughput would be around 5% higher than in the previous three months, according to Bloomberg calculatio­ns based on Sinopec public filings for the first nine months of the year.

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