CHINA REFINERS HAVE OPTIONS If OPEC+ are able to use output restrictions to keep crude prices above $80 a barrel for a sustained period, as seems to be their desired outcome, the question is how will Chinese refiners respond. By building stockpiles now, they can reduce crude imports later in the year if they deem prices to be too high. Most of the crude arriving in China in the first quarter of this year would have been arranged in the last quarter of 2022, when the benchmark Brent futures price dropped from just under $100 a barrel to as low as around $76. The price continued to track sideways at the start of this year, before dropping as low as $70.12 a barrel on March 20, a decline that prompted OPEC+ to cut another 1.16 million bpd of output from May onwards. This move pushed Brent contracts back above $80 a barrel, a level they have maintained, closing at $83.12 on Wednesday.
It's likely that Chinese refiners view the current price as
too high given the soft global economic outlook, which in turn
will lead them to first seek the cheapest grades available, such
as discounted Russian cargoes.
But if the price of crude remains elevated, China's refiners
will have the option to import less and use up stockpiles, or
reduce the current high volume of exports of refined products.
China's exports of refined products soared 59.8% in the
first quarter to 18.2 million tonnes, which works out to about
1.62 million bpd if the BP Plc conversion factor of 8 barrels of
product per tonne is applied.
Exports of refined products jumped by 610,000 bpd in the
first quarter from the same period last year, while imports of
crude increased by about 700,000 bpd.
This means that China's domestic consumption actually was
soft in the first quarter, especially in light of the ongoing
flows into inventories.
The risk is that the oil market focuses on the data showing
strong Chinese crude imports and refinery throughput, but
ignores the other side of the equation of still robust inventory
builds and surging fuel exports.
The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist
for Reuters.
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GRAPHIC-China crude available vs refinery throughput: ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
(Editing by Jamie Freed)