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LSEG data shows that the diesel East-West spread has reached a record high.

LSEG data shows that the diesel East-West spread has reached a record high.

The East-West spread in the front-month for diesel with 10ppm sulphur reached its largest discount in a year, according to LSEG data. Asian prices have been hammered by weak fundamentals despite ICE's strength.

The spread was almost $32 per metric ton lower at the close of the market, and had been increasing for two weeks.

This was the biggest discount since mid-February of last year.

Several Singapore-based sources reported that Asian markets were grappling with an abundance of supplies since the end of January and a weaker than expected regional demand. Stockpiles at Singapore's key storage and distribution hub were above 10.5 millions barrels during the week ending February 12.

Two regional sources stated that the cold weather in the Northwest Europe has supported the prices, as have the earlier export volumes from the region to the United States. Arrivals have also been low due to the earlier closed arbitrage.

Analysts say that the ICE gasoil price has also been supported due to a firmer natural gas market.

Trade sources say that these wider East-West spreads may result in swing sellers shifting their cargoes to the west instead of the east. This, unlike previous months, will hopefully reduce regional supply pressures.

LSEG data on ship tracking showed that India will likely ship 280,000 metric tonnes of 10ppm sulphur-free diesel to Europe in February, which is around twice the volume shipped to Europe in January. Reporting by Trixie YAP Editing by David Goodman & Kim Coghill

(source: Reuters)