Record U.S. oil exports set to surge further - Mercuria

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By Libby George and Dmitry Zhdannikov

(Reuters) - Already record U.S. are set to surge further in the coming month as stored in one of the world's last areas of excess stockpiles pours into global markets, the chief executive of trading house Mercuria, Marco Dunand, said.

The U.S. shale revolution upended global energy markets, and in late September the country's hit a record 1.98 million barrels per day (bpd). But Dunand said the surplus of in tanks meant more was likely to come.

"I think the volume that's going to be exported from the U.S. in the next two or three weeks is unprecedented in size," Dunand told the Global Summit, adding levels could hit 2.2 million bpd.

"Looking at the vessel fixtures of recent times, I think we're going to see record over the next month."

The United States lifted its nearly 40-year ban on in late 2015. As U.S. crude production continues to rise, its has found buyers in nearly every refining hub from Europe to Venezuela to China and India.

Dunand said after "hundreds of millions of barrels" had departed tanks and floating storage elsewhere in the world over the past year, the United States is an outlier of excess.

"The U.S. has an excess of crude stocks. Product stocks are more or less in line," Dunand said. "The rest of the world, crude stocks are more or less in line. The excess of crude stocks to rebalance the market naturally has to find its way."

In July and August, the Brent and Dubai crude contracts flipped into backwardation, a market structure in which immediate prices are higher than those in the future. This structure suggests markets are balanced or in short supply.

But U.S. crude futures remain in contango, a structure in which later prices are above the prompt level, indicating there is still a surplus.

"If you have backwardation in Dubai, backwardation in (Brent) and a contango in WTI (West Texas Intermediate crude), it's telling you that some of the WTI excess has to move to other places," Dunand said.

"Some of those U.S. barrels are going to go into Europe, and some into Asia. Asia is going to absorb a fair amount of that crude," Dunand said.

Still, he said the market was prepared to absorb the without significantly weighing on global price benchmarks.

"The refiner will go and buy the cheapest possible barrels."

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(Reporting by Libby George and Dmitry Zhdannikov; Editing by Dale Hudson)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, October 13 2017. 15:13 IST