Asia oil refining margins drop to two-year low as gasoline profit plunges

Reuters  |  SINGAPORE 

By and Florence Tan

(Reuters) - refining margins, the benchmark for profitability among in Asia, fell to their lowest in two years, dragged down by lower gasoline margins as refiners have ramped up output after completing maintenance and as stepped up exports.

Margins at a typical complex refinery in dropped to $4.28 a barrel at the market close on Monday, the lowest since August 2016, according to data. Among oil products, gasoline margins fell the most, dropping by half in the past month to under $5 a barrel.

"The (refining) margin weakness was shared globally," said Joe Willis, at Wood Mackenzie, adding that the consultancy's global composite margin fell to $4.20 a barrel during the week of June 18, well below the five-year average of almost $6 a barrel.

"The weakness can be primarily attributed to weaker gasoline cracks. Higher are likely to result in slower demand growth, particularly in the U.S. among the peak demand season," he said.

China, which holds the most refining capacity in Asia, increased crude throughput during the first five months of 2018 by 9 percent from a year ago to a record, with the bulk of the increase leading to a boost in output of aviation and motor fuel.

Similarly, refineries in Japan, and Singapore are also ramping up output after completing maintenance earlier in the second quarter.

will also be importing a record 39 million barrels of U.S. crude in July, mainly light grades. That could further lift gasoline and naphtha output and continue to weigh on refiners' profits, said two traders that participate in the market.

"Refineries in the region have been processing lighter crude as the margins for naphtha and gasoline have been quite good up until recently," said a

"So (the drop in margin) may mean a switch in crude or yield again, but it will take a while to take effect. The (refining) margins are getting very compressed now."

(Reporting by and Florence Tan; Additional reporting by in BEIJING, Osamu Tsukimori in TOKYO, Henning Gloystein in SINGAPORE; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)

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First Published: Tue, June 26 2018. 10:46 IST