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The US has a large supply of cargoes to cushion it from the price shock in Europe and Asia

Analysts and traders say that U.S. crude cargo prices have fallen from recent price spikes, while in Europe and Asia prices continue to reach record highs, seven weeks after the Iran 'war.

The war in Iran disrupted the global oil flow with the closure of the Strait of Hormuz - a vital trade route - and caused damage to oil facilities in the entire region. This pushed the price of crude oil in Europe, the Middle East and Asia up to record highs.

As the world's largest oil producer, the U.S. has been able, through its refineries, to access the medium-sour crude that they prefer, as well as recent product from Venezuela to cushion some of the shock.

According to Argus Media data, physical cargoes of Mars Crude, a medium sour crude produced in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico traded at an outright rate of $97 a bar on Wednesday. This is down from $128.70 a bar on April 2.

The price of Dubai benchmark crude oil in the Middle East became the most expensive benchmark at $170 per barrel.

"European buyers and Asian buyers require immediate physical barrels. U.S. refiners are "on the supply-side of the equation" and not "price-takers", according to David Jorbenaze.

As part of an international effort to address shortages caused by the war, the U.S. is releasing 172 million barrels from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

Gus Vasquez is Argus Media's crude editor. He said that the SPR release will feed into markets in which Mars will directly compete. "So an increase in supply of its product is likely to have a negative impact on prices, as we have historically seen when there has been an SPR released."

VENEZUELAN CRUDE Imports Rise

The crude oil released by the SPR has a medium-sour taste, just like the Venezuelan crude that more U.S. refining companies have access to since the capture of Nicolas Maduro, the former Venezuelan president, in January.

In the first quarter of 2019, the U.S. imported 295,000 barrels of Venezuelan crude per day, an increase of 14% over the previous year and the highest quarterly amount since the fourth quarter 2018.

The combination of SPR releases, Venezuelan barrels and high freight risks for?Europeans or Asians are keeping a lid the U.S. Physical Market," said Neil Crosby. Analyst at Sparta Commodities. He added that, from a sour perspective, the region is well supplied.

However, not all U.S. crude oil prices have dropped. WTI Midland, a lighter, lower-sulfur oil, delivered to Europe by refiners'scrambling' for alternatives to Middle Eastern imports, reached a record high on Tuesday of $22.80 per barrel over Brent.

Janiv Shah, Rystad Energy vice president for oil markets analysis and Rystad Energy, stated that Mars is rarely exported because it's consumed in the United States. The export-oriented WTI, however, would have the most upside due to the increased competition. Reporting by Robert Harvey, London; editing by Liz Hampton and Bill Berkrot.

(source: Reuters)