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Singapore's oil product stocks hover around 40 million barrels

Singapore's oil product stocks hover around 40 million barrels
Singapore's oil product stocks hover around 40 million barrels

Government data released on Thursday shows that oil product inventories in Singapore, Asia’s main trading hub, have barely changed from week to week. This is because declines in light distillates and residual fuels offset gains in middle distillates.

Enterprise Singapore data shows that total onshore oil product stocks were hovering at 40.33 million barrels for the week ending July 8 compared to 40.45 millions barrels last week.

Markets are anticipating an increase in inventories if exports to regions like Northeast Asia continue to rise, after a recovery of refining operations these past two months. China's outflows will also increase after Beijing lifted its restrictions on refined fuels exports until the end of July.

A certain amount of uncertainty remains, however, regarding Middle East supplies due to the return of conflict in that region.

MIDDLE DISTRILLATES BOUNCE BACKWARD

Diesel and jet fuel inventories rose from?last weekend to a little more than one-month's high of 8,9 million barrels despite increased net exports.

The majority of the imports came from India and the Middle East. Malaysia and Indonesia were the regional contributors.

Exports increased by?more that 50%, but outflows into Australia were absent.

The east-west spread has reached more than $100 per ton discount, and traders expect lower diesel swing barrels to be shipped to Singapore in July.

LIGHT DISTILLATES RESIDUAL FUELS SLIPP FURTHER

The residual fuel stockpiles fell to their lowest level in three weeks, falling 2.4% on a weekly basis to 19,18 million barrels (3.02 millions tons).

The total fuel oil exports out of Singapore's onshore tanks rose 61.2% in a week to exceed 265,000 tons. Hong Kong, Vietnam, and China were key markets.

The total imports of fuel oil also increased, increasing by 41.3%, to more than 907,000 tonnes during the same period.

The arbitrage supply was replenished more than the week before, with Brazil & Nigeria as the leading origins of?imports.

Singapore has also seen a surge in the import of fuel oil from Saudi Arabia. The total was 130,000 tonnes?in a single week. This is the highest amount since mid-March.

The inventories of light distillate, which includes naphtha, gasoline and other products, have fallen to a new low in three weeks, falling to 12.245 millions barrels. This is because net gasoline exports?outpaced the imports. Strong outbound flows into regional markets like Malaysia, Indonesia, and Australia also drained stocks.

The total gasoline exports in the past week were approximately 750,000 metric tonnes (6.34 millions barrels), far exceeding imports, which were roughly 179,000 tons. Malaysia took nearly 274,000 tons of it, Indonesia around?262,000, and Australia was at 63,000.

The Naphtha inventories increased, as imports totaling about 219,000 tonnes (1.97 millions barrels) exceeded the exports by only a few thousand tons. Saudi Arabian imports were seen for the first since supplies had been dwindled by the war. Russian supplies amounted to 30,000 tonnes.

(source: Reuters)