The Chinese bitumen market strengthened slightly this week, supported by firm crude prices despite a typical lack of demand ahead of the lunar new year break.
Two major state-run refineries implemented price hikes, taking prices in east and south China to around 2,900-2,950 yuan/t ex-refinery and around Yn3,000-3,100/t ex-refinery respectively.
State-controlled PetroChina made three price hikes from 1-10 February totalling Yn150/t for its offers across south and east China-based refineries. The refiner's inventories are likely to be low, market participants said, as excess cargoes from northeast China moved into east and south China as temperatures started to fall. The refinery expects production levels for 2021 to remain flat year on year.
State-controlled refinery Sinopec made a upward price revision of Yn50-100/t across its refineries in the week ending 12 February, after holding prices firm for three straight weeks.
The Ice front-month April Brent crude contract was at $61.06/bl earlier today, after rising above $60/bl this week for the first time in over a year. The consistent surge in feedstock prices is expected to weigh on production margins for bitumen, prompting refineries to increase offer prices immediately ahead of the lunar new year.
The March-delivery contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) continued to firm, hitting the highest in a year at Yn2,948/t during the 10 February trading session. Volumes exceeded 16,000 contracts, with each contract consisting of 10t of bitumen.
The second-most heavily traded contract, for June delivery, also traded at a year's high, closing at Yn2,896/t on 10 February. More than 300,000 contracts were traded. The contract is due for physical delivery on 15 June 2021.
Bitumen prices are expected to track crude in the coming weeks. But the market could get a boost as workers at road construction projects are expected to receive financial incentives for not returning to hometowns during the lunar new year holidays this year because of the Covid-19 pandemic.
An estimated 70pc of workers are expected to remain on site at projects this year, compared to only 30pc last year. This is expected to expedite the restart of projects after the holidays on 19 February.