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West African oil is struggling to find buyers, as global surpluses build

West African oil is struggling to find buyers, as global surpluses build
West African oil is struggling to find buyers, as global surpluses build

West African crude oil faces competition from Middle East, Latin America

China and India switch to alternative, cheaper oil grades

Dangote refinery reduces Nigerian imports of oil

Robert?Harvey & Seher Dareen

LONDON 18 DECEMBER - West African crude sellers are struggling to find buyers for up-to-26 December-and-January-loading cargoes due?to stiff competitors from abundant and cheaper alternatives, traders and analysts have told. Analysts say that the amount of crude oil from Nigeria and Angola which is not being sold, is indicative of an overall surplus in the oil market. This led to a sell-off on the international futures markets, which pushed Brent crude down below $60 per barrel this week.

Victoria Grabenwoger, an analyst at Kpler, said that the overhang of West African crude cargoes reflects a global crude supply surplus which emerged in Q1 of this year.

Two traders reported that approximately 20 million barrels (or a little more) of Nigerian crude oil were still unsold as of Thursday. Meanwhile, Angola had five or six cargoes left in its December-January programme. The cargoes are causing a delay in the beginning of the February trading cycle, even though Angola has already released its loading schedule and term nominations.

This is a very large amount of oil that has not been sold, and it is especially unusual for this month. The West African trade cycle usually runs two months in advance. The estimated overhang for both countries was as high as forty million barrels this week.

The analyst for OilX, Francisco Gutierrez said that the current market softness is partly seasonal, and partly due to changing buying patterns as a result of freight costs and other supply options. He added that Angolan trade in January has fallen 20% behind its average long-term pace, because China, the world's largest commodities buyer, switched to alternative grades which are cheaper or closer to each other. Analysts say that supplies from the Middle East are displacing West African medium and heavy grades in Asia due to lower official selling prices and shorter journeys in January. India's oil imports have remained?resilient? despite the tightening of Western sanctions. They are replacing medium-heavy density West African oils, while lighter to medium-density West African grades struggle to compete with supplies from Argentina and Brazil. Grabenwoger of Kpler said that Nigeria is also left with more oil to sell because Africa's biggest oil refinery, Africa's 650,000 barrels per day Dangote plant has reduced its imports. This will be due to maintenance in January. Reporting by Robert Harvey in London and Seher Dareen, edited by Alex Lawler & Barbara Lewis

(source: Reuters)