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Business Energy

Saudi Arabia raises oil prices for March

It’s the first increase for the Arab Light grade since September



The kingdom raised all prices for European buyers by $2 a barrel, and most of those for the US by 30 cents.
Image Credit: Reuters

Saudi Arabia unexpectedly raised oil prices for its main market of Asia, while also lifting those for US and European customers.

The moves came despite crude prices having fallen about 7 per cent this year, as rising interest rates in the US and Europe counter optimism about a rebound in China’s demand following the ending of coronavirus lockdowns.

State-controlled Saudi Aramco increased most prices for crude that will be shipped to Asia in March. The company’s flagship Arab Light grade was lifted to $2 a barrel above the regional benchmark, 20 cents more than the price for this month.

It’s the first increase for the grade since September and goes against a Bloomberg survey of traders and refiners, which predicted a cut of 20 cents.

The kingdom raised all prices for European buyers by $2 a barrel, and most of those for the US by 30 cents.

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Many OPEC members have sounded bullish about China - perhaps the single-biggest factor determining oil-price moves this year - in recent days.

The group’s secretary-general, Haitham Al Ghais, said he was more upbeat on China. And the head of Kuwait’s state energy company said to Bloomberg that consumption in the world’s biggest crude importer was already on the rise and that it “is not a dead-cat bounce”.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc., citing low stockpiles and spare capacity among producers, sees Brent rising back above $100 a barrel in the third quarter as China fully reopens its economy. Morgan Stanley has a similar forecast.

Saudi caution

Still, Saudi Arabia’s energy minister, Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, on Saturday said the kingdom will be cautious about raising oil production.

“I will believe it when I see it and then take action,” Prince Abdulaziz said, referring to higher oil demand globally.

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Saudi Arabia is the world’s biggest oil exporter. It sells about 60 per cent of its crude shipments to Asia under long-term contracts, pricing for which is reviewed each month. China, Japan, South Korea and India are the biggest buyers. Its moves tend to be closely followed by other Arabian Gulf producers such as Iraq and Kuwait.

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