London — Price differentials for Nigerian light sweet grades continued at multi-year highs even as official selling prices published on Wednesday were more modest.
* Nigeria’s NNPC raised December official selling prices (OSPs) for Bonny Light to dated Brent plus 128 cents, from plus 58 cents in November, and Qua Iboe crude oil to 150 cents from 63 cents per barrel last month.
* Both grades were last offered at around at least $3.50 above dated Brent and selling for the highest prices since at least 2014 amid a similar spike for Azeri and North Sea crude.
* Nigeria’s Nembe Creek oil trunk pipeline that contributes
to Bonny Light crude suffered a shutdown last week, which
traders said were causing days-long delays to loading, though no
force majeure is in place.
* Around 20 Nigerian cargoes were still available from the
December programme, traders said, though sellers expected a
smaller glut given higher prices and demand, even if it is
relatively small compared with previous months.
* European gasoline cracks have nudged up this week, buoying
demand, while demand for sweeter oil more generally has risen
worldwide ahead of new global shipping rules.
* The last couple of Angolan crude oil cargoes for export in
December were heard to have sold as term allocations for the
January preliminary programme were finalised.
TENDERS
* Indian Oil Corp is running two tenders. One is for crude loading in the last 10 days of January and the is other for cargoes loading at the end of December, set to close on Thursday.
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* Russia is about to complete a fresh expansion of its oil pipelines to the Pacific coast that will cement its role as a top Asian supplier and allow it to ship a third of its total oil exports to Asia-Pacific markets.
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- Reuters