OPEC helps savvy oil traders to sell millions of barrels
Oil traders are relying on an unwitting ally, OPEC, to help them quietly exit what experts say is one of their most
lucrative gambits ever -- storing vast oil supplies at sea to sell later for profit.
Trading firms like Koch and Vitol have sold millions of barrels from supertankers into the United States over the
past month to cash in after crude prices doubled since winter, tanker brokers told. The oil sold ashore has gone
almost unnoticed, offset by output cuts by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries that allowed traders
to unload tankers without causing a tsunami of US oil imports that would crash prices.
US imports, including sales from the tankers, rose 3 % to 9.3 mm bpd, still below an average 9.4 mm bpd this year.
OPEC and crude traders are often at odds, with OPEC blaming speculators for wild oil price swings. But the tidy
sell-off of seaborne crude shows how their interests can also align, and how each side anticipates the other's
moves.
With supply cuts, OPEC sought to deplete the oil stocks at sea and boost prices. Traders waited for the OPEC cuts to
take effect before discharging their stashes of stored oil.
Trading firms have sold about 30 mm barrels from supertankers since April, when crude stocks at sea rose to record
levels above 100 mm barrels, tanker brokers said. About 70 mm barrels are still floating, they said.
"There's now less oil in floating storage than there was 1 to 2 months ago, due to OPEC cuts and to increased
refining," one firm keeping oil at sea said. Traders should sell another 15 % of floating supplies by late July,
based on tanker charter data. All supertanker cargoes of 2 mm barrels are enough to fuel California for a day. The
sales unwind positions held by Koch, Vitol, Shell, Glencore, BP and others who cashed in on storage in the first
quarter, when premiums surged for holding oil off the market.
OPEC now has incentive to cheat
Ocean storage is now less attractive after oil prices for near-term delivery rose, reducing a so-called contango. A
monthly premium of $ 8 to hold barrels in February has narrowed to 80 cents. That's less than the $ 1 a month it
costs to keep a barrel at sea.
"For a while there, storing oil was a license to print money," said Stephen Schork, author of the Schork Report on
energy. "Now it's less profitable, so oil is being sold ashore. It's Economics 101."
By mostly complying with output cuts of 4.2 mm agreed since late 2008, OPEC, which pumps a third of oil supplies, has
allowed storage barrels to flow ashore even as global fuel demand fell amid a recession.
"OPEC's whole idea in bringing production down has been to draw oil out of storage and lower import levels," said
Roger Diwan, a partner at PFC Energy in Washington.
US-bound oil exports from the Gulf, OPEC's cradle, have recently fallen by about a third, according to George Los, an
analyst with tanker broker C.R. Weber. US imports from OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia, the largest exporter, have plunged
to their lowest level in 21 years, according to government data. At 967,000 bpd in March, they were less than half of
historic highs.
A major US crude buyer told that Saudi exports to the United States don't appear to have risen since March. US oil
imports from West African and Latin America, home to other OPEC nations, also haven't risen noticeably, the buyer
said.
