Butterfly effect: Low EU river stirs fuel market 10,000
km away in Singapore
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[November 09, 2018]
By Koustav Samanta
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Low water levels on
the Rhine river have caused a fuel supply deficit in parts of Europe's
industrial heartlands that is sucking up cargoes from more than 10,000
km away in Singapore.
Following a long, scorching summer, water levels on the Rhine - a key
commodity shipping lane connecting industrial centers in Switzerland,
Germany, France and the Netherlands to major seaports - fell to record
lows, limiting the transport of coal, steel, grains and fuel.
That has created a shortage of heating oil heading into the European
winter, pushing up the market and triggering a search for supplies from
as far away as Southeast Asia, where there is ample fuel and gasoil
prices are low.
Northwest European prices for gasoil hit a record $35-per-ton premium
over Singapore values for November fuel deliveries, and December
premiums are still above $20 a ton. That means gasoil could be pulled
into Europe from Southeast Asia via arbitrage trades through the end of
the year.
"The wide arb means it's possible to shift gasoil to the West (Europe)
at a profit," said Sukrit Vijayakar, director of Indian energy
consultancy Trifecta, adding that the situation stemmed from the low
Rhine water levels and Asian refineries coming out of turnarounds.
(Asia gasoil discount with Europe: https://tmsnrt.rs/2PiFqgT)
The arbitrage to Europe from Asia is usually workable when the price
spread is at least $15-$18 a ton. Many Asian refineries have just come
out of maintenance, or turnarounds, increasing the region's availability
of fuels like gasoil.
Gasoil inventories held in the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp (ARA)
refining and storage hub fell for the fourth straight week to 2.4
million tons, the lowest volume since mid-July this year, according to
data from Dutch consultancy PJK International.
By refilling ARA stocks with gasoil, including from Asia, traders said
they hope to be able to ship gasoil up the river as soon as water levels
recover.
MARKET DISTORTIONS
Some meteorologists expect low water levels to last until January,
however, which may mean a continuation of the blockage and ongoing
market distortions.
As a result, European traders may start exporting gasoil out of the
region to offset arbitrage volumes into ARA from Asia.
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A couple sit on their camping chairs and look at Lorchhausen amid
the river bed of the dried out Rhine, as water levels reached a
historic low level and freight vessels cannot sail fully loaded on
Europe's most important waterways, near Bacharach, Germany, October
19, 2018. REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay/File Photo
"It is one thing to ship the distillates from Singapore to Europe. But it will
not reach the end-customer as long as ship traffic is constrained due to low
water levels of the Rhine and other rivers," said Carsten Fritsch, a commodity
analyst at Germany's Commerzbank.
"German retail gasoline and heating oil prices are very high as a result ... No
visible improvement is in sight here in the near future, according to German
weather forecasts," he said.
Europe typically starts to stockpile gasoil, which is used for heating in the
region, ahead of the cold winter months.
Asian refiners, though, must act fast to serve the European demand window, as
American and also Russian suppliers are also eying the opportunity.
"Comparing Asian refiners with their U.S. counterparts, the latter stand a
better chance to go to Europe as freight rates are cheaper and the voyage time
is very much shorter," one trader in Singapore said, declining to be named as
she was not allowed to talk in public about commercial operations.
Despite America's advantage over Asia to supply Europe, ship tracking data in
Refinitiv Eikon shows one tanker, the Diva, carrying gasoil from Southeast Asia
to Europe.
The 37,000 ton tanker is currently in the Mediterranean and expected to arrive
at Antwerp on Nov. 16.
"If this arb window stays open, I'd expect more such routes to be fixed next
week," said a Singapore-based tanker charterer, also declining to be named.
(Map: Gasoil shipping from Asia to Europe - https://tmsnrt.rs/2PgvWCK)
(This story has been refiled to restore missing word 'fuel' in headline.)
(Reporting by Koustav Samanta in SINGAPORE; Additional reporting by Ron Bousso
in LONDON; Editing by Henning Gloystein and Tom Hogue)
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