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Oil Refiners Face Grim Times Despite Collapse in Crude Costs

Price Crash Offers Little Respite for Beleaguered Oil Refiners

(Bloomberg) -- Oil refiners’ margins may draw some temporary benefits from the plunge in crude prices, but it won’t be enough to offset the coronavirus’ hit to fuel demand and new plants coming online.

Although crude prices have collapsed due to a price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia, product prices will take longer to catch up. For refiners, that creates a short-lived window where margins get a boost from lower feedstock costs, without a commensurate drop in fuel prices.

“Refiners will get temporary relief from the cheap crude, but any sustained increase in runs will see a worsening oversupply situation in the products markets beyond 2Q after peak turnaround season,” said Sandra Octavia, an oil products analyst at Energy Aspects Ltd.

Almost every refining margin rose on Monday as crude futures tumbled, according to data from Oil Analytics Ltd. on Bloomberg. That was to be expected. Sharp moves in crude oil futures markets are rarely mirrored immediately and fully by prices of petroleum products like gasoline, diesel and jet fuel. A look at simple refining margins illustrates the sudden change.

Oil Refiners Face Grim Times Despite Collapse in Crude Costs

Although cheap oil usually stokes demand, any benefits this time are likely to be outweighed by the coronavirus’ negative impact on consumption as authorities around the world react to the virus’ spread. Refiners in China and South Korea are cutting runs, while diesel shipments from these countries to the storage hubs of Singapore and Malaysia have risen sharply.

Also see: Asian Refiner Margin Relief Likely Short-Lived as Virus Lingers

“Because of coronavirus, run rates at refineries are under threat,” said Steve Sawyer, director of refining at Facts Global Energy.

Refiners are also facing an ever-more competitive market. More than a million barrels a day of plant capacity is expected to be completed this year, along with close to three million barrels a day next year, according to BloombergNEF. That’s in addition to about 2.5 million barrels a day that was commissioned last year.

Storage Access

For refiners looking to take advantage of the collapse in crude values, much will depend on their access to storage facilities, whether that’s for holding on to crude or having somewhere to put the fuels they manufacture. The run cuts in China and South Korea are a result of plants running out of storage space because demand has been so weak, according to Sawyer.

India’s refineries, which are currently running at a relatively low utilization rate, will be best placed to gain from the low crude price, said David Doherty, downstream oil specialist at BloombergNEF.

The benefit, though, will be short-lived, he said. Indian refiners export a lot of jet and diesel-type fuels to the European market, where the coronavirus outbreak is increasingly cutting into oil demand, particularly for those products.

Russia’s Rosneft PJSC isn’t likely to increase crude production until April, while Saudi Arabia will probably do the same. As a result, there won’t be an immediate change in refiners’ crude slates, Sawyer said. Longer term, the combination of more medium sour crude from those nations -- along with potentially less light-sweet oil as U.S. tight oil producers feel the pricing pressure -- could result in more high-sulfur fuel oil production.

There’s also perhaps a bright spot: recovery from the virus.

“The number of new coronavirus cases has slowed down in China, and should the economy show signs of recovery it will support margins,” said Victor Shum, vice president of energy consulting at IHS Markit in Singapore.

--With assistance from David Doherty.

To contact the reporters on this story: Jack Wittels in London at jwittels1@bloomberg.net;Elizabeth Low in Singapore at elow39@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alaric Nightingale at anightingal1@bloomberg.net, Brian Wingfield, Fred Pals

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