Commodities

Singapore Fuel Oil Stocks Fall to a 6-month Low

In Singapore, residual fuel oil inventories sank  4% in the week ended Aug. 25.  Its oil stocks  were down to a six-month low as net import volumes were persistently weak, as shown by official data on Thursday. 

Fuel oil stocks onshore  fell  to their lowest since the week to Feb. 24. Enterprise Singapore data showed they fell by 889,000 barrels, or about 140,000 tonnes, to 21.18 million barrels, or 3.34 million tonnes. 

The weekly figures were volatile. The country’s weekly net fuel oil imports rose by 26% from the previous week to 593,000 tonnes. They were also below the 2021 weekly average of 687,000 tonnes for a fifth straight week. 

Residual fuel stocks were 8% lower and below this year’s weekly average of 23.13 million barrels, compared with 2020’s figures.

The Philippines was the top net export destination for Singapore fuel oil at 44,000 tonnes. South Korea at 38,000 tonnes and New Caledonia at 37,000 tonnes followed next.

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) were the biggest net imports at 210,000 tonnes.  That was followed by Malaysia at 207,000 tonnes, Brazil at 96,000 tonnes and Algeria at 74,000 tonnes.

Meanwhile, oil majors Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM), Chevron Corp (NYSE:CVX) and Schlumberger NV (NYSE:SLB) gained between 0.6% and 1.4%, tracking crude prices. 

Related Post

Oil Prices Up as Storm Approaches Gulf of Mexico

On Friday, oil prices rose and are headed to post big gains for the week. Supply disruption worries beset the markets as energy companies began shutting production in the Gulf of Mexico

A possible hurricane was forecast to hit on the weekend prompting the oil companies to halt production in the area.

At 1220 GMT, Brent crude futures were $1.36, or 1.9%, higher at $72.43 a barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures crept $1.52, or 2.3% higher to $68.94 a barrel.

Brent is on course for its biggest weekly jump since June 2020. That is with a rise of 11% expected for the week. WTI is also on track to a weekly gain of more than 10%, also expected to be the strongest since June a year ago.

Ahead of the storm on Thursday, companies started airlifting workers from Gulf of Mexico oil production platforms. BHP and BP (NYSE:BP) said they had begun to stop production at offshore platforms as a storm starting in the Caribbean Sea was forecast to pass through the Gulf on the weekend.

 

Recent Posts

AUD/JPY Climbs Back to 102.20, Halting Losses

Key Points: AUD/JPY broke below a rising wedge, signalling possible bearish momentum, with immediate resistance at 103.00 and support at…

3 days ago

EUR/JPY Hit 168.25, Boosted by 0.3% Q1 GDP Growth

Key Points EUR/JPY Rises to 168.25: Strengthened by robust Eurozone economy and steady ECB policy. Eurozone GDP Grew by 0.3%…

3 days ago

Chinese Electric Vehicle Market: Nio Stock Up 20%

Key Points: Nio's shares hit 44.20 HKD, up 20%, with electric vehicle deliveries up 134.6% year-on-year to 15,620. BYD leads…

4 days ago

Ethereum Price Dips Below $3,120 Amid Market Slump

Key Points: Ethereum fell sharply from $3,355 to a low of $2,813, reflecting high volatility and sensitivity to market dynamics.…

4 days ago

Stock Markets: Nikkei Down 0.1%, Hang Seng Up 2.4%

Key Points Nikkei 225 slightly fell by 0.1%, while the Hang Seng index surged by 2.4%. USD/JPY increased slightly, highlighting…

4 days ago

Gold Price Increases to ₹71,278 and $2,328

Key Points: Gold prices rose on MCX India to ₹71,278/10 gm and COMEX US to $2,328/oz. The US Dollar Index…

4 days ago

This website uses cookies.