By Ahmad Ghaddar, Shariq Khan, Trixie Yap and Enes Tunagur
LONDON (Reuters) – Global diesel prices and refining margins spiked following the most recent round of U.S. sanctions on Russia’s oil trade on expectations the measures would tighten supplies, in line with analysts and LSEG data.
The US imposed its hardest sanctions on Russian producers and tankers yet on Jan. 10 to curb the world’s No. 2 oil exporter’s revenue for its war in Ukraine.
Lots of the newly-targeted vessels, a part of what known as a shadow fleet that seeks to avoid Western restrictions, have been used to ship oil to India and China. Refiners in those countries have benefited from low cost Russian imports that were banned in Europe following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
“Diesel [profit margins] are up following news on the sanctions, and we expect meaningful disruptions to Russian diesel exports,” said Energy Elements analyst Natalia Losada. She added that no less than 150,000 barrels per day (bpd) of Russian diesel exports from Gazprom Neft and Surgutneftegas refineries are in danger.
The premium of the first-month European diesel benchmark contract to that six months later spiked to $50.25 a metric ton on Thursday, a 10-month high, LSEG data shows.
The diesel market was already in backwardation, the term used for a market structure whereby nearby contracts trade at a premium to later delivery contracts. This normally denotes tight prompt supply.
Diesel refining margins stood at a five-and-a-half month high of $20 a barrel on Thursday.
Cold weather within the northern hemisphere was already supporting diesel markets.
Asian diesel refining margins jumped 8% on Monday to above $17 a barrel, the most important gain since September, before easing to about $16.50 a barrel on Thursday.
U.S. diesel futures surged greater than 5% on Jan. 10, their biggest every day gains since October, and hit a six-month high of $111 per barrel on Thursday. Front month diesel is commanding an over $10 premium over the sixth-month contract, the most important premium in almost a yr.
Traders and refiners are factoring the upper crude costs into fuel prices and refining runs, two Singapore-based trade sources said, adding that lower Russian diesel flows are unlikely to have a big effect on Asian markets directly.
Even with higher diesel margins, Asia’s complex refining margins have weakened as crude prices have gained at a much faster pace than refined product prices, a 3rd source said.
Dubai money prices rose by 8.5% from last Friday, while Singapore February gasoil swaps only climbed 5.5% in the identical time period.