World

Saudi Arabia may slash January crude prices for Asia

Top oil exporter Saudi Arabia is expected to slash crude prices for Asian buyers in January to the lowest in years, largely tracking a slump in Middle East benchmark prices last month, traders said on Monday.

The January official selling price (OSP) for flagship Arab Light may fall by 70 to 90 cents a barrel from December to at least a four-year low, six sources at Asian refineries said in a Reuters survey.

The price cuts come after the gap between front and third-month Dubai prices narrowed in backwardation by 86 cents in November from the month before, Reuters data showed, despite TotalEnergies snapping up as much as 15.5 million barrels of crude on the S&P Global Platts window.

Backwardation refers to the market structure when prompt prices are higher than those in future months.

Last month, spot premiums for January-loading Middle East grades also fell by about half from the previous month on weak demand.

Arab Extra Light’s OSP is expected to fall in line with Arab Light, while some respondents expect to see larger price reductions for heavier grades – Arab Medium and Arab Heavy – as fuel oil margins have weakened, the survey showed.

One respondent hoped for larger price cuts for heavy grades, as Chinese refining margins were still very poor.

Still, the outcome of the OPEC+ meeting on Dec. 5 is expected to determine supply in early 2025 and may influence Saudi OSPs, traders said, with some expecting state oil giant Saudi Aramco to announce prices after the meeting is concluded.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, known as OPEC+, is discussing delaying its oil output hike due to start in January, OPEC+ sources told Reuters last week.

Saudi crude OSPs are usually released around the fifth of each month, and set the trend for Iranian, Kuwaiti and Iraqi prices, affecting about 9 million barrels per day of crude bound for Asia.

Aramco sets its crude prices based on recommendations from customers and after calculating the change in the value of its oil over the past month, based on yields and product prices.

Saudi Aramco officials as a matter of policy do not comment on the kingdom’s monthly OSPs.

Below are expected Saudi prices for January (in $/bbl against the Oman/Dubai average):

DECChangeest.JAN OSP
Arab Extra Light+1.50-1.00/-0.70+0.50/+0.80
Arab Light+1.70-0.90/-0.60+0.80/+1.10
Arab Medium+0.95-1.00/-0.65-0.05/+0.30
Arab Heavy-0.20-1.10/-0.65-1.30/-0.85

Source : Reuters

GLOBAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE MAGAZINE

Recent Posts

Trump’s mortgage-backed bond purchases not moving needle on housing costs

Experts say $200bln bond-buying effort unlikely to significantly lower housing costs.  There's scant evidence so…

17 hours ago

Trump tariff shift calms European bond market

That has helped ⁠at least to put a floor under euro zone bond prices. Euro…

17 hours ago

Vision 2030 projects may drive corporate loans by Saudi banks to $75bln in 2026

Bank profitability will remain strong this year despite lower interest rates, says S&P. Saudi banks…

17 hours ago

Europe’s emissions trading system is an ally, not an enemy, of industrial competitiveness

The 2026 review of the EU ETS must be anchored in facts and focus on…

17 hours ago

How the Fed makes decisions: Disagreement, beliefs, and the power of the Chair

Federal Open Market Committee statements typically sound unanimous, but the Committee’s internal debates rarely are.…

17 hours ago

Femicides, anti-violence centres, and policy targeting

Local responses to gender-based violence, with femicide as its most extreme form, remain uneven across…

17 hours ago