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Four VLCCs heading to US Gulf to store crude

  • Market: Crude oil, Freight
  • 19/05/20

At least four empty very large crude carriers (VLCCs) booked for floating storage are on their way to the US Gulf coast and will likely add to the tally of VLCCs storing US crude.

The four tankers are part of a flurry of floating storage bookings that occurred amid a growing oil glut on sharply lower demand from Covid-19-related restrictions on travel. The oversupply combined with an oil price crash resulted in high demand for crude storage.

The glut persists, but rising prices have eased some of the pressure on storage capacity. The Nymex WTI June futures contract closed today at $32.50/bl, compared with the -$37.63/bl close of the May contract on 20 April.

The Blue Nova, chartered by US oil producer Hess, is scheduled to arrive on 24 May, per data from oil analytics firm Vortexa. The Maxim, chartered by fellow US crude producer Occidental, is set to reach the US Gulf coast on 31 May. The remaining two VLCCs, the Occidental-chartered Sea Ruby and the Hess-chartered Leonidas, are scheduled to arrive on 3 June and 24 June, respectively.

Hess said it has chartered a third VLCC for storage. Occidental has no other known floating storage bookings.

The four tankers were chartered for 9- to 12-month durations at an average rate of $89,500/d, according to the Argus floating storage bookings database. VLCC short-term time charter rates have since dropped to around $75,000/d as the Opec+ cuts lower cargo demand and free up tonnage supply.

Excess US crude and limited land-storage capacity have already prompted traders to exercise floating storage options on at least four additional VLCCs with US crude. The Eliza, Maran Corona, and Maran Apollo, all chartered by Shell, have not moved far since loading full cargoes at Louisiana Offshore Oil Port (LOOP) at various points stretching back to early April. The Vitol-chartered Hunter Saga VLCC is sitting near Rotterdam with a US crude cargo at $100,000/d.

Other tankers — some of smaller sizes — are also sitting idle with US crude cargoes, though the reason may be port delays. The Agios Nikolas, a VLCC that Trafigura chartered on 6 February before the pandemic sapped oil demand, has been sitting idle in Taiwan for over a week, despite being initially booked for a standard US-Asia journey, not a short-term time charter.

Traders have booked at least 75 VLCCs, 47 Suezmaxes, and 36 Aframaxes on short-term time charters that include floating storage options, according to the Argus database.


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26/12/24

Viewpoint: MEH-Midland spread to remain wider in 2025

Viewpoint: MEH-Midland spread to remain wider in 2025

Houston, 26 December (Argus) — WTI Houston's premium to WTI in Midland, Texas, is set to hold at 50¢/bl or wider in 2025, boosted by swelling volumes headed toward the Gulf coast as Houston grows in importance as a center for price discovery. The locational spread between WTI Houston and Midland rose steadily throughout 2024, averaging 49¢/bl year-to-date and widening as high as $1.41/bl during the June trade month as the 1.5mn b/d Wink-to-Webster pipeline was taken offline for repairs. In 2023, the spread averaged 21¢/bl. Trading activity for WTI at Oneok's Magellan East Houston (MEH) terminal — both in the physical and financial markets — climbed to all-time highs in 2024. Reported trade month volumes for WTI Houston swelled to 1.26mn b/d during the December trade cycle, a high for the year, and just 0.8pc below its previous record. On 16 December, WTI Houston trade closed the day at 153,000 b/d for the January trade cycle, the highest single-day trade volume in the history of Argus assessments of the grade. In financial markets, WTI Houston trade activity broke records in 2024, with open interest on CME's WTI Houston futures contract climbing to an all-time high of 412,519 lots — each 1,000 bl — on 21 November. MEH demand up despite export slowdown Trading activity broke records even as US crude exports slowed in the latter half of 2024 on Chinese economic woes that dampened Asian demand. New Chinese stimulus initiatives, namely relaxed fiscal and monetary policy , are meant to reverse that trend, but it remains to be seen if the efforts will work. Further challenges weighing on the US export market are a strengthening dollar combined with a high degree of uncertainty surrounding president-elect Donald Trump's proposed tariff plans, which feature ratcheting-up trade tensions with China even more. Multiple projects to add Permian takeaway capacity at the Texas Gulf coast are in various stages of planning, which could eventually open the window for ever-larger WTI export volumes, and further support WTI Houston against Midland. But industry participants have grown skeptical of the need for new export terminals or other projects. Midstream companies showed little enthusiasm for pitching new coast-bound pipelines from the Permian basin in their end-of-year investor reports . Key firms previously sought more takeaway capacity before the Covid-19 pandemic, when WTI Houston premiums to WTI in Midland consistently topped $1/bl, which would help recoup pipeline construction costs. As it stands, the roughly 3mn b/d total available pipeline capacity from the Permian basin to the Houston area is likely to remain static in coming years. This status quo for onshore infrastructure will help prop open the Houston-Midland WTI premium for the coming year, even if export demand fails to picks up in 2025. By Gordon Pollock WTI Houston-WTI Midland spread Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Viewpoint: US tariffs may push more Canadian crude east


26/12/24
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26/12/24

Viewpoint: US tariffs may push more Canadian crude east

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24/12/24

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23/12/24
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23/12/24

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Viewpoint: Brazil may face road bottleneck in 1Q


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23/12/24

Viewpoint: Brazil may face road bottleneck in 1Q

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