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China stays Venezuela course, despite oil import lull

  • Spanish Market: Crude oil
  • 20/08/19

The Chinese government is so far showing no sign of curtailing its oil ties to Venezuela, despite state-owned PetroChina's rescheduling of Merey crude loadings in August.

Argus has confirmed that state-owned PetroChina's trading arm ChinaOil rescheduled up to seven VLCCs of heavy sour Merey in August that had been set for delivery in October. Venezuela's political opposition and the White House swiftly seized on the move to declare that Beijing was abandoning the Venezuelan government of President Nicolas Maduro in response to US sanctions aimed at removing him.

Chinese companies are indeed sensitive to potential blowback from the US financial and oil sanctions on Caracas. Chinese engineering firm Wison, for example, has denied repeated Venezuelan government assertions that it agreed to repair PdV's refineries under a barter deal for supply of asphalt, fuel oil and petroleum coke.

But the pause in PetroChina's liftings in August appears to be a short-term commercial move stemming from broader market dynamics, rather than an indication that Beijing is rethinking its support for the Maduro government or cozying up to Washington to ease their trade war. The September loading schedule is not yet available.

China and India are taking turns as the main destination for Venezuela's crude exports since the US cut off purchases under a broad oil sanctions regime imposed in late January 2019. China imported 340,000 b/d of Venezuelan crude in the first half of 2019, just shy of the 350,000 b/d average a year earlier.

ChinaOil lifts the Venezuelan crude mostly as payment for around $60bn in oil-backed loans that the Chinese government has extended to Caracas since 2007. The company resells part of the Venezuelan crude to Chinese independent refiners, but those refiners are free to source feedstock from other companies as well, such as Russian state-controlled Rosneft, PdV's other big oil-backed creditor. These market forces inside China could help to explain why ChinaOil reprogrammed the August loadings.

Most of the Venezuelan crude that Rosneft lifts is destined for its Indian refining subsidiary Nayara Energy, which operates the 400,000 b/d Vadinar refinery. India's Reliance Industries (RIL), which has US operations, has stopped importing Venezuelan crude in response to the US sanctions, even though these do not have any direct secondary component.

The main market alternatives for Venezuelan crude are Colombian Castilla Blend, Mexican Maya and Western Canadian Select (WCS) or like-quality Cold Lake, which offer buyers more reliable supply and consistent quality compared with Merey, which is nominally pegged at 16° API. Trading firm Mercuria is scheduled to deliver at least 2mn bl of Cold Lake to China in October.

Inside Venezuela, PdV has struggled for months to sustain crude production and export logistics in the face of the extensive suite of US sanctions. But the company has managed to stabilize output at around 750,000 b/d in recent months, partly with Chinese help.

Beyond debt service, China's enduring oil ties to Venezuela are part of its global Belt and Road campaign based on long-term investment in natural resources and infrastructure. In Venezuela, this strategy is embodied by PetroSinovensa, a heavy crude blending joint venture between PdV and its minority partner CNPC, the parent company of PetroChina.

The joint venture, based at the Jose industrial complex on the coast of Anzoategui state, is undergoing a capacity expansion from 130,000 b/d to 165,000 b/d, with the goal of reaching 230,000 b/d in 2021 and eventually 330,000 b/d. The project blends 8°-10° API crude from the Orinoco heavy oil belt with Venezuelan domestic light grades, including 30° API Mesa and 42° API Santa Barbara. Earlier this year PdV imported a cargo of Nigerian light sweet Agbami for blending to top off limited domestic production and sustain blending.

The PetroSinovensa expansion project contrasts with PdV's other integrated heavy crude joint ventures which are stalled except for the 210,000 b/d PetroPiar venture with minority partner Chevron. PdV has stopped upgrading Orinoco crude at PetroPiar in favor of less complex blending to produce more Merey for the Asian market. But renewed operations there could prove fleeting if Chevron is forced to pull out in late October because of the US sanctions.


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04/04/25

WTI crude falls near 4-year low on trade war: Update

WTI crude falls near 4-year low on trade war: Update

Adds end of day changes to stock markets, WTI, Treasuries Calgary, 4 April (Argus) — The US light sweet crude benchmark WTI fell by more than 7pc after China retaliated against the US' latest tariff action, while a selloff in global equity markets deepened. May Nymex WTI fell by $4.96/bl to $61.99/bl, the lowest since 26 April 2021, and is down by $9.72/bl over the most recent two days. Turmoil also continued for a second day in equity markets with the S&P 500 down by 6pc, the Nasdaq down by 5.8pc and the Dow Jones Industrial Average down by 5.5pc from the day prior, which saw similiar losses, wiping out nearly a year of gains for the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq. Trillions of dollars in value were wiped out. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to end the day just above 4pc, its lowest since October, as Treasury prices rallied as investors sought safe haven in the dollar-denominated notes. Treasury yields and prices move counter to each other. The equity selloff persisted on mounting fears of a recession after US president Donald Trump on 2 April imposed sweeping tariffs on dozens of global trading partners for imports into the US. China hit back on Friday with a 34pc tariff of its own against the US from 10 April, driving away any hope by investors for a rebound after a selloff the day before. WTI fell by as much as 9pc during Friday's session after China's retaliation, bottoming out at $60.45/bl. The gloomy economic outlook overshadowed a strong job report that showed the US added a more-than-expected 228,000 jobs in March, showing hiring was picking up last month just as the new US administration began mass federal firings and announced tariffs on trading partners. The IMF say tariffs represent a "significant risk" to the global outlook while US-based bank Goldman Sachs said Friday it has cut its oil demand growth estimate for this year to 600,000 b/d from 900,000 b/d, based on its economists' new view of economic growth. Adding price pressure this week has also been the unexpected plans by eight Opec+ members to unwind production cuts faster , upping output in May by 411,000 b/d. By Brett Holmes Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Tariffs and their impact larger than expected: Powell


04/04/25
04/04/25

Tariffs and their impact larger than expected: Powell

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Trump talks up tariff deals as markets slide


04/04/25
04/04/25

Trump talks up tariff deals as markets slide

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WTI crude falls to 4-year low on escalating trade war


04/04/25
04/04/25

WTI crude falls to 4-year low on escalating trade war

Calgary, 4 April (Argus) — The US light sweet crude benchmark WTI fell by as much as 9pc this morning after China retaliated to the US' latest tariff action, while a selloff in global equity markets deepened. May Nymex WTI traded as low as $60.81/bl Friday morning, a more than $6/bl tumble from the settled price in the session before when it gave up $4.76/bl. Prompt month WTI has not been this low since 13 April 2021 when it settled at $60.18/bl. Prices across commodities and equities are down sharply after China on Friday said it will impose a 34pc tariff on all imports from the US from 10 April, a retaliation for new tariffs launched by US president Donald Trump on 2 April . China faces a 34pc import tariff from 9 April, on top of the 20pc tariffs Trump has imposed over the past two months. The prompt-month WTI contract has given up more than $10/bl, or 17pc, in the two days since Trump announced that dozens of countries would be subject to "reciprocal" tariffs, prompting serious concerns over lower global economic growth and a higher chance of a recession. The IMF say tariffs represent a "significant risk" to the global outlook while US-based bank Goldman Sachs said Friday it has cut its oil demand growth estimate for this year to 600,000 b/d from 900,000 b/d, based on its economists' new view of economic growth. Adding price pressure this week has also been the unexpected plans by eight Opec+ members to unwind production cuts faster , upping output in May by 411,000 b/d. Turmoil continued for the second-straight day in equity markets, with the S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average and Nasdaq all down between 3-5pc so far. By Brett Holmes Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

IMF says tariffs a significant risk to growth: Update


04/04/25
04/04/25

IMF says tariffs a significant risk to growth: Update

Updates Brent price in paragraph 4, adds PVM comment in paragraphs 5-6, Morgan Stanley in paragraph 10 London, 4 April (Argus) — US import tariffs pose a "significant risk" to the global economy, according to the IMF. "We are still assessing the macroeconomic implications of the announced tariff measures, but they clearly represent a significant risk to the global outlook at a time of sluggish growth," IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva said. "It is important to avoid steps that could further harm the world economy." The comments came after two days of turmoil on global oil and equities markets, sparked by the US imposition of sweeping tariffs on trade. For oil markets, this was compounded by a surprise decision from the Opec+ producer group to speed up the unwinding of its output cuts. Front-month Ice Brent crude futures prices fell earlier today to a 3.5 year low of $67.48/bl, down by more than 10pc since US President Donald Trump released details of the tariffs on 2 April. Analysts at brokerage PVM described the timing of this as "frankly amazing" and said it was "the icing to this global bearish cake". "The market is now reckoning on the cork being out of the production bottle and believes, as we do, that it will not be pushed back in," PVM said. US-based bank Goldman Sachs today said it has cut its oil demand growth estimate for this year to 600,000 b/d from 900,000 b/d, based on its economists' new view of economic growth. This and the extra production from Opec+ has led the bank, which was bullish on oil prices for a long time, to cut its Brent crude price forecasts for a second time in three weeks , by $5/bl to $66/bl this year. Goldman also removed a price range from its forecasts, "because price volatility is likely to stay elevated on higher recession risk." Like Goldman, UK-based bank Barclays said there is downside risk to its $74/bl forecast for Brent this year. It said oil demand is holding up, "but the potential effect of the trade war on demand is hard to ignore." Analysts at US-based bank Morgan Stanley said a recession is a realistic outcome of the tariffs decision, although not its base case. Modelled against previous recessions, the bank said there is a risk of oil demand growth falling to zero, compared with its forecast of 900,000 b/d for this year. On supply, it noted that an Opec quota increase "is not the same as an actual production increase", and said it would wait for additional clarity before reassessing its second-half 2025 Brent price forecast of $67.5/bl. By Ben Winkley Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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