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Oil Refining Margins Trashed as Tanker Rates Rise to Record

Oil Refining Margins Trashed as Tanker Rates Rise to Record

(Bloomberg) -- The cost of hiring oil tankers is running out of control and the world’s refineries are feeling the pain.

It cost a record $8 a barrel to ship West African crude to Asia on Friday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s roughly four times the average for January through August, the month before rates began to rally. Ship brokers were reporting additional bullish charters on Monday.

The surge followed an attack on an Iranian oil tanker in the Red Sea on Friday, adding tension in a market that was already soaring because of U.S. sanctions on units of a giant Chinese shipping company.

Oil Refining Margins Trashed as Tanker Rates Rise to Record

“I have never seen freight at these levels,” said Jan-Jaap Verschoor, a director at Oil Analytics, which tracks hundreds of refining margins around the world.

A $2-a-barrel slump in Singapore margins on Friday was predominantly caused by the surge in freight and similar trends were seen in import-reliant refining locations, he said. The biggest losers from a prolonged surge in freight would be refineries that lack the ability to source crudes locally, making them dependent on long-distance supplies by sea, Verschoor said.

Tanker owners were earning in excess of $300,000 a day on the industry’s benchmark route as of Friday, an unprecedented amount, according to data from the Baltic Exchange. Those same vessels, which can carry 2 million barrels of crude, were earning $25,000 a day about a month ago.

Oil Refining Margins Trashed as Tanker Rates Rise to Record

The impact of the freight surge on refining will hinge on how long it lasts. Friday’s incident in the Red Sea followed a series of attacks that hurt Saudi Arabia’s oil production and exports, and made traders eager to source crude from other regions.

Read more on the impact of freight rates on margins in Singapore

The tanker market has been strengthened by U.S. sanctions on units of China COSCO Shipping Corp. that made traders wary of booking the company’s vessels. In addition, some ships have been removed from the market while they get fitted with equipment to eliminate sulfur to comply with environmental regulations that start next year.

The attack on Friday added to risk premiums for shipping oil from the Persian Gulf, according to Burak Cetinok, head of research at Arrow Shipping.

--With assistance from Firat Kayakiran.

To contact the reporter on this story: Alaric Nightingale in London at anightingal1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alaric Nightingale at anightingal1@bloomberg.net, Rachel Graham, Christopher Sell

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