Venezuela's Oil Output Crash Is Costly for U.S. Refiners
Venezuela's Oil Output Crash Comes at a Cost to U.S. Refiners
(Bloomberg) -- U.S. Gulf Coast refiners are paying the price for shrinking Venezuelan crude output.
U.S. production is at an all-time high, while output from the Latin American nation, despite a modest increase in January, is in decline. As a result, U.S. crude’s typical premium to heavy Venezuelan oil shrank to as small as 31 cents a barrel Friday, the narrowest since October.
Most U.S. Gulf Coast refiners profit when crude grades like those from Venezuela are at a large discount to WTI because these so-called heavy crudes comprise 40 percent to 60 percent of the oil they process, said Fernando Valle, oil and refining analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence.
“The narrowing can be attributed to a rapidly changing fundamental picture in both markets,” Mara Roberts Duque, a New York-based analyst at BMI Research, said by email. “Rising U.S. production is keeping a lid on the WTI upside while continued declines in Venezuelan output are supporting the local benchmark.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Milana Vinn in New York at mvinn@bloomberg.net, Lucia Kassai in Houston at lkassai@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: David Marino at dmarino4@bloomberg.net.
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