Diesel Spreads Hit Near Two-Year Peak After India Cuts Russian Crude Purchases

Diesel Spreads Hit Near Two-Year Peak After India Cuts Russian Crude Purchases

Diesel Spreads Hit Near Two-Year Peak After India Cuts Russian Crude Purchases

Recently, Bloomberg reported that five of India’s largest oil refiners have made no purchases of Russian crude for December delivery, instead turning to Saudi Arabia, UAE and Iraq for crude with similar properties to Urals. The move comes after Washington sanctioned Rosneft and Lukoil while the EU adopted its 19th package of sanctions. Only Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) and Nayara Energy, in which Rosneft holds a 49% stake, have purchased crude from Russia for December. Meanwhile, the diplomatic sensitivity of the ongoing trade talks between the U.S. and India has no doubt influenced the decision by Indian refiners to ditch Russian oil. But India is not the only entity feeling pressure by the Trump administration to stop buying Russian energy. Swiss multinational energy trading company, Gunvor, has abandoned its bid for Lukoil’s international assets–including European refineries, oilfield shares in Iraq, Mexico, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, and global retail stations–following Washington’s opposition to the deal.

And now commodity analysts at Standard Chartered have reported the Indian pivot away from Russia has triggered a spike in oil product prices even as crude prices remain largely unchanged. To wit, ICE Brent-Gasoil crack spreads have doubled from the $15-17/bbl range held

In the first half of the year, to a 21-month high above $32/bbl, good for a nearly 70% increase in the year-to-date. The fact that Brent prices are still trading at multi-month lows suggests that overwhelming bearish sentiment has ruled oil markets for much of the year still lingers, even as oil product markets tighten. Gasoil is a middle distillate mainly used in commercial and agricultural sectors for off-road vehicles, machinery, and generators.

Related: Germany Caps Power Prices to Save Its Industrial Base

Unfortunately for the oil bulls, the mid-term oil price outlook remains bleak, with U.S. oil production growth exceeding expectations. Previously, we reported that Big Oil companies have continued to ramp-up oil production, taking advantage of their improving operating leverage to squeeze more profits from low oil prices. To wit, Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM) has reported that it has increased hydrocarbons production to 4.7 million oil-equivalent barrels per day (boe/d), including nearly 1.7 million boe/d from the Permian and more than 700,000 boe/d from Guyana. Meanwhile, Exxon brought the Yellowtail project online in the third quarter, four months ahead of schedule. Yellowtail production is expected to clock in at 250,000 boe/d, increasing total Guyana output to over 900,000 boe/d. The story is pretty much the same at Chevron (NYSE:CVX). The United States’ second largest oil company posted record global production of 4.09 million boe/d, up 21%Y/Y, including a 27% Y/Y increase in U.S. production to a record 2.04 million boe/d.

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