The
U.S. imported 878,000 barrels of Saudi crude a day in the first four weeks of
August, the least since 2009 with the Middle Eastern oil giant producer now
looking more and more towards Asia form where it can easily squeeze out
Nigeria’s growing foothold.
Saudi
Arabia’s Arab Light crude for sale in the U.S. averaged 48 cents a barrel less
than Light Louisiana Sweet, a Gulf Coast benchmark, in August, the narrowest
discount in data compiled by Bloomberg back to 1991.
After
years of keeping the price of crude sold to the U.S. low enough to maintain
market share, Saudi Arabia is losing ground as the shale boom leaves U.S.
refiners with ample supplies of inexpensive domestic oil.
Shale
drilling has boosted U.S. oil output to the highest level since
1986. As
refineries turn to lower-priced domestic oil to make fuel at a record pace, the
Saudis and other foreign suppliers are left with dwindling slices of the market.
In June, imports from Saudi Arabia accounted for the smallest share of crude
processed at U.S. refineries since February 2010.
“The
Saudis are not going to sell crude at a disadvantage to themselves — they’re
not about buying market share anymore,” Mike Wittner, Societe Generale (GLE)’s
head of oil market research in New York, said by telephone Aug. 28. “Those days
are long gone. They’ll price crude to be competitive with the competing sour
grades in every market, and if that means their flows to the U.S. are down, so
be it.”
Saudi
Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi told reporters in Vienna in December that he expected
Saudi shipments to the U.S. to stabilize at an average of 1.4 million to 1.5
million barrels a day this year. Saudi Arabian officials didn’t return at least
nine calls between Aug. 28 and yesterday seeking comment on the exports.
Saudi
Arabian Oil Co. shares ownership with Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSA) of three
refineries on the U.S. Gulf Coast, including a 600,000-barrel-a-day plant in
Port Arthur, Texas, the largest in the U.S. The refineries, which have combined
capacity of 1.07 million barrels a day, imported 331,000 barrels a day from
Saudi Arabia in June.
Until
recent months, the kingdom maintained a steady flow to the U.S. around 1.3
million barrels a day even as total U.S. imports fell by 34 percent from a peak
in June 2005. Other countries didn’t fare as well. Shipments are 59 percent
below their peak from Mexico, 56 percent from Venezuela and 93 percent from
Nigeria.
Imports
are being pushed out by domestic production that’s risen 65 percent in the past
five years, spurred by horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing in
underground layers of shale rock. Growing pipeline deliveries of heavy crude
from Canada also displaced waterborne cargoes from abroad.
The
price of West Texas Intermediate crude averaged $96.08 a barrel in August,
compared with $106.54 the same month the year before. It settled at $94.45 in
New York today.
“The
Saudis might fully intend to stay in the U.S. market, they might fully intend
to have a million-plus barrels, it’s just the market supply-and-demand levels
probably won’t allow that,” said John Auers, executive vice president at energy
consulting firm Turner Mason & Co.
Saudi
Aramco, as the state oil company is known, bases prices for the different
destinations on regional indexes, adjusting premiums and discounts to be
competitive against oil from other countries.
In
the U.S., Aramco’s adjustments kept the average price of Arab Light more than
$2 a barrel below Light Louisiana Sweet every month until July. The discount
was $1.27 at 4:02 p.m. today.
Aramco
was offering oil to the U.S. at a significant discount to prices in other
regions. Arab Light to the U.S. was $5.64 a barrel less than to Asia in 2013,
falling to a $22.64 discount in November. Saudi Arabia lost $2.6 billion by
selling oil to the U.S. instead of Asia in 2013, Auers said.
Shifting
Sales
“In
some ways, it’s inevitable that Saudi Arabia realizes there are more attractive
markets, and they’ll rotate away, supply their U.S. refineries with domestic
grades and sell their crude at a premium to Asia,” Francisco Blanch, head of
commodities research at Bank of America Corp. in New York, said by phone Aug.
29. “As the U.S. becomes a more balanced crude force in global markets, it’ll
move toward lesser imports and become decreasingly attractive to foreign crude
sellers.”
Saudi
exports to the U.S. averaged 1.32 million barrels a day in 2013, the
second-most of any country behind Canada. They reached 1.58 million in April,
before dropping by almost half to average 878,000 over the first four weeks of
August, according to U.S. Customs data compiled by Bloomberg.
The
price changes and declining imports might just be a blip, Jason Bordoff,
founding director of Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy in
New York, said by telephone Aug. 26. Saudi Arabia uses more crude domestically
during summer months to generate power and meet increasing demand for air
conditioning. Temperatures have been higher than normal.
“I’m
not sure how much I’d read into a couple of weeks or even a couple of months of
data,” Bordoff said. “Saudi imports have come down, but they’re still higher
than what we saw in 2009.”
Saudi
Aramco yesterday lowered for a second straight month its adjustments versus the
regional benchmark for crude sold to the U.S. The discount for Arab Light sales
in the U.S. in October was widened by 40 cents a barrel from September. Aramco
reduced the Arab Light premium for Asia by $1.70 a barrel.
“The
Saudis continue to want to maintain a diversified market for their crude, and
they continue to want a significant presence in the U.S. market.” Bordoff said.
Shipments
to the U.S. have fallen even as Saudi exports to the rest of the world have
held steady. U.S. imports from Saudi Arabia fell by 562,000 barrels a day from
April to June, more than the 506,000-barrel-a-day decline of total Saudi
exports, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration and Joint Oil
Data Initiative, a database supervised by Riyadh-based International Energy
Forum.
Saudi
sales to Asia will become more important moving forward as demand for liquid
fuels in the region is expected to grow 44 percent through 2035, while North
American demand shrinks, according to BP Plc. In September China surpassed the
U.S. as the world’s largest importer of crude oil and refined products.
The
redirecting of supplies to other markets and the U.S.’s shrinking dependence on
foreign oil will inevitably change American interest in international
conflicts, Blanch said.
“It
is perhaps the biggest question: Is the reduced commercial relationship between
the U.S. and Saudi going to lead to lesser involvement of the U.S. in the
Middle East?‘‘ said
Businessday
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