S. Aramco to venture into non-Saudi crude oil trading - sources
By Rania El Gamal
SINGAPORE
Petroleumworld 09 28 2017
Saudi Aramco's trading arm will start trading non-Saudi crude oil to mainly feed its international joint ventures as the world's largest oil exporter seeks to optimise profits, industry sources familiar with the move said.
The expansion into crude comes as Saudi Aramco is working to boost its valuation ahead of the planned listing of up to 5 percent of its shares on one or more international stock exchange next year, in what could be the world's biggest initial public offering.
Saudi Aramco declined to comment.
Set up in 2012 to market refined products, base oils and bulk petrochemicals, Aramco Trading Company (ATC) will expand into crude to mainly feed international Aramco joint ventures like the Motiva refinery in the U.S. and S-Oil in South Korea, the sources said. They declined to be identified because they weren't authorised to speak to media.
The Saudi Aramco ventures abroad buy a certain portion of non Saudi crude for better economics and crude specifications, the sources said. Motiva's 603,000-barrels-per-day (bpd) Port Arthur refinery in Texas became a subsidiary of Saudi Aramco on May 1 after Aramco and Royal Dutch Shell ended a 20-year refining partnership.
“Rather than that Motiva for example goes into the market and buy non-Saudi crude, Aramco Trading now can supply those barrels,” said one source with knowledge of Aramco's strategy.
The unit of Saudi Aramco trades around 1.5 million barrels a day of refined, liquid chemical and polymer products, according to its website. ATC opened its first office abroad in Singapore in 2015 to market oil products and win new business for the parent company from Asia.
ATC has been trading higher volumes in derivatives markets since late 2014 as Saudi Arabia flipped from a net diesel importer to an exporter of the fuel as Saudi Aramco expands its global refining footprint.
Middle East oil producers are venturing into buying and selling oil to boost their incomes as a sharp drop in crude prices since mid-2014 has forced the industry to become more efficient and commercially focused.
Story by Rania El Gamal; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell from Reuters.
reuters.com 09 27 2017
Copyright© 1999-2017 Petroleumworld or respective author or news agency. All rights reserved.
We welcome the use of Petroleumworld™ (PW) stories by anyone provided it mentions Petroleumworld.com as the source.
Other stories you have to get authorization by its authors. Internet web links to http://www.petroleumworld.com are appreciated.
Petroleumworld welcomes your feedback and comments, share your thoughts on this article, your feedback is important to us!
We invite all our readers to share with us
their views and comments about this article.
Write to editor@petroleumworld.com
By using this link, you agree to allow PW
to publish your comments on our letters page.
Any question or suggestions,
please write to: editor@petroleumworld.com
Best Viewed with IE 5.01+ Windows NT 4.0, '95,
'98,ME,XP, Vista, Windows 7,8,10 +/ 800x600 pixels