Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

Business Energy

Abu Dhabi wants to change how a fifth of global oil is priced

Adnoc hopes to persuade oil companies and traders to take minority stakes in new exchange



Adnoc’s Ruwais Industrial Complex. Adnoc plans to start futures trading of Murban next year by setting up a new commodities exchange in the emirate.
Image Credit: Bloomberg

Dubai: The Middle East produces a fifth of the world’s oil, but the region’s never had a benchmark price that competes with London’s Brent or New York’s West Texas Intermediate (WTI). That could be about to change.

Abu Dhabi wants to create a benchmark for Middle Eastern crude that competes for customers in Asia with exports from America’s shale boom. If the new contract for Abu Dhabi’s Murban crude takes off, it could herald a fundamental shift in the way Gulf producers sell oil.

“I think this has legs,” said Mike Muller, Vitol Group’s head of crude trading for Asia. Murban is “a single grade that serves as a good reference, quality-wise, for the big new flow that’s coming into Asia,” he said this month at a conference in the Middle Eastern oil-trading hub of Fujairah.

Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. (Adnoc) plans to start futures trading of Murban next year by setting up a new commodities exchange in the emirate.

How a producer prices its oil can have a big financial impact. A formula that leaves even a few cents on the table for every barrel sold could mean an annual loss of hundreds of millions of dollars in potential revenue.

Advertisement

The main global reference prices, or benchmarks, for crude are for WTI oil in the US and North Sea Brent in Europe. Buyers and sellers can trade futures for both, helping to determine prices for the physical commodity. The current benchmark for Middle Eastern sales to Asia is based on a price assessment of Dubai crude compiled daily by price-reporting agency Platts, a division of S&P Global Inc.

Abu Dhabi ICE

Adnoc is working with Intercontinental Exchange Inc, the platform where Brent is traded, to set up the Murban contract. Like WTI and Brent, Murban is relatively light and low in sulphur. This may enhance its appeal as a benchmark for Asia, where refiners can use it more readily as a substitute for US crude.

“There is a need for a new marker to reflect shifting crude flows,” Ahmed Mehdi, a research associate at Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, said by phone from London. “Murban has many of the characteristics for benchmark success: large physical volumes, its availability for spot trading, and potential for a forward paper market.”

Adnoc hopes to boost the contract’s liquidity, or trading volume, by persuading international oil companies and traders to take minority stakes in the new exchange, according to people with knowledge of the situation.

Advertisement

However, Abu Dhabi can’t guarantee that other Middle Eastern producers too would adopt Murban as their benchmark. A lack of such converts would limit the new contract’s appeal, and even successful benchmarks can take years to develop.

Adnoc and ICE both declined to comment. Although Adnoc hasn’t announced details about the contract, traders say the company will need to loosen restrictions that bar buyers from shipping the crude to any destination they want.

Not the first

Abu Dhabi wouldn’t be the first regional producer to venture down this path. Oman and Dubai joined with CME Group Inc in 2007 to start the Dubai Mercantile Exchange to trade Omani crude futures. Saudi Arabia began using DME Oman futures as a component in its official pricing last year.

Whether the Murban contract succeeds or not “is a very difficult question,” Adi Imsirovic, head of oil at Gazprom Marketing and Trading, said at the conference in Fujairah. “How do you get liquidity without confidence, and how do you get confidence without liquidity?”

Advertisement