Asia’s naphtha prices on Thursday dropped to their lowest level since November 18 after sweeping U.S. import tariffs triggered fears it would destroy feedstock demand, traders said.
The price for second-half May naphtha dropped by $22 to $619 per metric ton over Brent crude. The backwardation between prompt month and front month narrowed sharply to $6 a ton from about $12 a day earlier.
“Prices will be driven by how crude oil benchmarks are faring, (and the) current weakness is reflecting that,” a Singapore-based source said.
Imports of oil, gas and refined products were exempted from the new tariffs, the White House said on Wednesday, but oil prices sank 3% a day later, which further added pressure on naphtha prices.
“Downstream demand is going to be hit,” another Singapore-based source at a large petrochemical trader said adding that there will be wider implications on capacity due to slowdown in goods consumption.
NEWS
– U.S. crude oil stockpiles rose sharply last week as refinery utilization declined and imports rose and the market braced for new tariffs from the Trump administration, the Energy Information Administration said on Wednesday.
– A meeting of eight top ministers of OPEC+ will likely keep oil output policy that calls for gradual oil output hikes from April unchanged, two OPEC+ sources said on Thursday.
– Asia’s oil hub of Singapore is set to receive more fuel oil from Nigeria’s Dangote refinery in April, following a jump in arrival volumes last month, according to trade sources.
Source: Reuters