Tue 21 Nov 2017 09:01

Oil and fuel oil hedging market update


By the Oil Desk at Freight Investor Services.



Commentary

Brent crude futures, the international benchmark for oil prices, were at $62.20 per barrel at 03:01 GMT, $8 cents above their last close, and U.S. WTI crude futures were at $56.50 a barrel, also up $8 cent from their last settlement. Come on people, the market is boring enough without trotting out the same headlines over and over again. 'Oil prices steady as rising U.S. output undermines OPEC cuts', 'Market waits for OPEC meeting'. Some interesting points not being talked about in these stories, oil hipster time. U.S. rig count remained unchanged. It wasn't long ago that people were losing their minds over the increasing rig count; why has this not gone to the moon with the increasing crude price? We've hardly had any movement since breaking through the $60 level. This is an important point to dwell on, especially with the news that ConocoPhillips is looking to invest all its new project money in shale oil. The implications of the IMO 2020 regulations are going to start to impact the market, and I bet if you are a tanker owner you are wringing your hands as there is going to be a lot of refined product that needs to be transported to ports to cater for the new demand. Goodie for you. WTI is looking like the younger brother of Brent who has now grown up and is far bigger and better. Its problems of investment for capacity increases and readjusting trade routes will have a profound effect on the market. Yes OPEC cut, yes inventories, blah blah, we get it and know it. But if you want to stay ahead of the curve, there's plenty of other things we could be taking about.

Fuel Oil Market (November 20)

The front crack opened at -7.95, weakening to -8.00, before strengthening to -7.90, ending -8.00. The Cal 18 was valued at -7.85.

The second-month EW arbitrage spread of 380 narrowed to a near two-month low as arrivals into Singapore through December are expected to improve.

Recently, weaker fuel oil prices in northwest Europe due to rising Russian fuel oil exports after the conclusion of the refinery maintenance season there, as well as relatively weaker tanker charter rates, have encouraged some suppliers to lock in fresh supplies into Singapore

Total fuel oil flows into East Asia for November were poised to close at nine-month high of around 7 million tonnes, boosted by recovering Western arrivals, near record-high inflows from the Middle East and 11-month high intra-Asia volumes.

Economic Data/Events: (UK times)

* 1:30pm: Chicago Fed Nat Activity Index, Oct.

* 3pm: U.S. Existing Home Sales, Oct.

* 9:30pm: API issues weekly U.S. oil inventory report

Singapore 380 cSt

Dec17 - 361.25 / 363.25

Jan18 - 360.00 / 362.00

Feb18 - 358.75 / 360.75

Mar18 - 357.50 / 359.50

Apr18 - 356.00 / 358.00

May18 - 354.25 / 356.25

Q1-18 - 358.75 / 360.75

Q2-18 - 354.75 / 356.75

Q3-18 - 349.50 / 352.00

Q4-18 - 344.50 / 347.00

CAL18 - 352.25 / 355.25

CAL19 - 317.75 / 322.75

Singapore 180 cSt

Dec17 - 365.25 / 367.25

Jan18 - 364.25 / 366.25

Feb18 - 363.50 / 365.50

Mar18 - 362.75 / 364.75

Apr18 - 361.75 / 363.75

May18 - 361.00 / 363.00

Q1-18 - 363.50 / 365.50

Q2-18 - 361.00 / 363.00

Q3-18 - 356.00 / 358.50

Q4-18 - 351.00 / 353.50

CAL18 - 358.50 / 361.50

CAL19 - 326.50 / 331.50

Rotterdam 380 cSt

Dec17 341.75 / 343.75

Jan18 341.75 / 343.75

Feb18 341.50 / 343.50

Mar18 341.00 / 343.00

Apr18 340.00 / 342.00

May18 339.00 / 341.00

Q1-18 341.50 / 343.50

Q2-18 339.50 / 341.50

Q3-18 334.50 / 337.00

Q4-18 326.00 / 328.50

CAL18 335.25 / 338.25

CAL19 296.75 / 301.75


Aicha Azad, Flex Commodities. Flex Commodities hires Aicha Azad as trader in Dubai  

Bunker firm appoints multilingual trader with bunker trading and cargo operations experience.

Desk calendar with the word “TAX”. 'Excess' fossil fuel profits should be taxed and given back to citizens, says T&E  

Campaign group calls for sustained taxes on excess profits or end to subsidies that keep demand high.

NYK Line’s Padma Leader vessel. Imabari Shipbuilding delivers LNG-fuelled car carrier to NYK Line  

Padma Leader expected to achieve up to 30% CO2 reduction through dual-fuel propulsion and exhaust gas recirculation.

Tallink’s MyStar vessel. Tallink targets full bio-LNG transition for Baltic shuttle vessels within a year  

Estonian ferry operator aims to replace all fossil LNG with renewable fuel on the Helsinki-Tallinn route.

Grimaldi's Grande Melbourne vessel. Grimaldi takes delivery of third ammonia-ready car carrier from Chinese shipyard  

Grande Melbourne is the third of seven vessels ordered from Shanghai Waigaoqiao Shipbuilding for Asia-Europe service.

BPCL and Cochin Port sign MoU. BPCL and Cochin Port sign MoU for LNG bunkering facilities  

Indian oil company and port authority agree to develop LNG refuelling infrastructure for vessels.

ClassNK Guidelines front cover. ClassNK publishes world-first guidelines for membrane-based onboard CO2 capture systems  

Classification society expands guidelines to cover membrane separation method for capturing ship exhaust emissions.

April Tan, Flex Commodities. Flex Commodities hires April Tan as lead trader for China  

Dubai-based marine fuels trader appoints experienced professional to Singapore office to drive regional expansion.

Contract signing ceremony. Yang Ming finalizes contracts for six methanol dual-fuel-ready boxships  

Taiwanese carrier signs deals with Japanese shipbuilders for vessels scheduled for delivery from 2028.

China’s Da Qing 268 vessel. China's first newbuild dual-fuel methanol bunkering vessel launched in Zhoushan  

Da Qing 268 can supply methanol and conventional fuels to ships at anchorage.





 Recommended