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West African Oil Loading for Asia to Slip in January

Maritime Activity Reports, Inc.

January 5, 2017

West African crude loading for Asia is expected to slide more than 10 percent in January as some buyers opt for regional grades or cargoes in floating storage, a Reuters survey of traders and shipping data showed on Thursday.

 
Some 1.808 million barrels per day (bpd) are scheduled to load from Nigeria, Angola, Ghana and other West African producers over the coming month, down from December's 17-month high of 2.1 million bpd.
 
Demand was still good, with buyers in China underpinning price differentials for Angolan oil in particular, but the slip highlighted the fierce competition for Eastern buyers in an oversupplied oil market. 
 
Buying in Indonesia accounted for the largest portion of the drop, falling to just one cargo from seven in December. State oil company Pertamina had purchased most of its cargoes via tenders awarded to traders including Chevron and Trafigura, who could supply it from oil loaded in other months or from storage.
 
"If there are any regional grades at better prices, or oil in storage, they could go for that," one trader said. 
 
Chinese buying dipped by just two cargoes, while Indian buyers took one additional cargo compared with December. 
 
Country - January cargoes - BPD '000s - December cargoes - BPD '000s
China - 38 - 1,165 - 40 - 1,225
India - 16 - 490 - 15 - 460
Indonesia - 1 - 31 - 7 - 215
Taiwan - 2 - 61 - 2 - 61
Japan - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0
S. Korea - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0
Others - 2 - 61 - 5 - 153
Total - 59 - 1,808 - 69 - 2,084
 
 
(Reporting by Libby George; editing by David Evans)

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