W. Africa Crude-Majors see Saudi outages boosting light crude
LONDON, Sept 25 (Reuters) - Energy majors holding cargoes of Nigerian light crude have yet to bring down prices, anticipating that outages to the output of comparable Saudi grades following the Sept. 14 attacks on two of its main plants could still boost demand. NIGERIA * Refining margins continue to be robust and buyer interest high, but potential customers say current indications are too high to make justify a sale. * As the tug-of-war over pricing for prompt-loading cargoes continues, trading is sluggish and a supply glut of over 20 cargoes from last month lingers, slowing down trades of crude exporting in November. * Buyer interest in heavy, sweet Egina oil continues to be high ahead of marine fuel rules looming for 2020. * Differentials range from a premium to dated Brent of $5.00 to $5.20, though November programmes had not emerged for most traders. ANGOLA * Saudi Arabia held its spot as China's largest supplier of crude in August for the second straight month, official customs data showed, although this month's attack on Saudi oil processing facilities may end the run. * Heavier crude may enjoy less of a bounce from the Saudi outages, as that infrastructure was less affected, but less Iranian imports by Asia stands to boost West African grades. * Middle distillate margins in Asia remained high amid physical tightness, but a very wide Brent-Dubai spread DUB-EFS-1M at $3.60 and steep backwardation hit demand. TENDERS * Both India's IOC and Thailand's PTT were running tenders for West African grades set to close late this week, but details did not emerge. RELATED NEWS * Saudi Arabia has restored its oil production capacity to 11.3 million barrels per day, three sources briefed on Saudi Aramco's operations told Reuters, maintaining a faster than expected recovery after the Sept. 14 attacks. * S&P Global Platts reported the first physical cargo trade for low-sulphur fuel oil (LSFO) with a maximum 0.5% sulphur content in Singapore ahead of a sulphur cap by the International Maritime Organization (IMO) next year. (Reporting by Noah Browning; editing by David Evansediting by David Evans) ))
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