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Saudi Aramco wants buyers to buy more oil for October after a price drop, sources claim

Three sources with knowledge of the matter have confirmed that Saudi Aramco, the world's largest oil exporter, has asked Asian buyers for more crude oil in October. The kingdom had made price cuts deeper than expected on all grades due to a growing supply.

Two sources claim that Saudi Aramco, in its bid to regain market share, spoke with Asian buyers at the APPEC Conference in Singapore this week, encouraging them to buy more crude oil in October.

One of them stated that this has partially led to the delay of the October supply being allocated to their customers, possibly until next week.

Aramco has not responded to a comment request. All sources spoke under condition of anonymity.

The state-owned producer announced the price of its Arab Light crude for Asia in October at $2.20 per barrel, which is $2.20 above the average Oman/Dubai. This represents a $1 drop from the five-month high reached in September.

The price reduction followed a decision made by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC+) and its allies, led by Russia, at the weekend to increase production by 137,000 barrels a day in October.

Since April, the group led by Saudi Aramco, which pumps half of all world oil, has already increased production by 2.5 million barrels per day, or 2.4%.

Analysts say the move shows that OPEC+ prioritizes market share, even if this means softer prices.

The increase in production has not yet been felt on global markets, due to the strong Middle East oil market in summer. However, it is expected that this will cause global oil markets to become surpluses and global benchmark Brent oil to drop below $60 per barrel.

Saudi crude exports from Saudi Arabia to China, the top importer, fell by about 43 million barrels between August and September.

Brent crude futures fell slightly to $67.38 per barrel on Thursday, on concerns about a softer U.S. market and broader oversupply risks. However, losses were contained by worries over the Middle East attacks and Russia's conflict in Ukraine. (Reporting and editing by Clarence Fernandez in Singapore, Florence Tan, Siyi Liu)

(source: Reuters)