在新冠肺炎病毒爆發(fā)迫使政府關(guān)閉各城市關(guān)口,鼓勵(lì)市民居家后,中國(guó)的燃料需求顯著減少。據(jù)估計(jì),中國(guó)現(xiàn)今燃料需求大約減少400萬(wàn)桶/天。
根據(jù)路透社專欄作家克萊德·羅素(Clyde Russell)估計(jì),和一月相比,二月中國(guó)原油進(jìn)口量仍較為平穩(wěn),僅減少16萬(wàn)桶/天。而三月,進(jìn)口到中國(guó)這一全球主要石油進(jìn)口國(guó)和作為主要經(jīng)濟(jì)增長(zhǎng)動(dòng)力的原油進(jìn)口量將少于二月,因?yàn)楫?dāng)新冠病毒大爆發(fā)給國(guó)家燃料需求踩下剎車時(shí),二月的大多數(shù)原油交易都已經(jīng)簽約,原油也已運(yùn)往中國(guó)。
同時(shí)由于一些煉廠會(huì)在冬季和夏季之間安排設(shè)備維護(hù),這也一同導(dǎo)致三月可能是中國(guó)今年原油進(jìn)口量最少的月份。
據(jù)稱因?yàn)樾鹿诓《颈l(fā)造成中國(guó)的煉制需求銳減,中國(guó)主要石油供應(yīng)商和全球最大石油出口國(guó)——沙特阿拉伯,在三月將至少縮減50萬(wàn)桶/天的對(duì)華出口量。
雖然一些因素表明三月中國(guó)原油進(jìn)口會(huì)顯著減少,但是有其他原因顯示中國(guó)石油進(jìn)口不會(huì)斷崖式下跌。
誠(chéng)然,石油需求量減少相當(dāng)大,包括IEA, EIA, OPEC的在內(nèi)的所有組織和分析機(jī)構(gòu),都將其2020年石油需求增長(zhǎng)預(yù)測(cè)數(shù)據(jù)削減23-40萬(wàn)桶/天,預(yù)計(jì)今年全球需求增長(zhǎng)為100萬(wàn)桶/天,甚至更少。
在新冠病毒爆發(fā)前,所有組織機(jī)構(gòu)都認(rèn)為在中美貿(mào)易協(xié)議第一階段和全球經(jīng)濟(jì)光明前景下,今年的需求增長(zhǎng)將加快速度。
當(dāng)前新冠病毒臨近肆虐邊緣,分析家認(rèn)為經(jīng)濟(jì)增長(zhǎng)前景會(huì)小于預(yù)期。市場(chǎng)也擔(dān)心病毒在中國(guó)以外超速傳播,將給予經(jīng)濟(jì)重?fù)簟?/span>
如果中國(guó)在三月有效地控制住新冠病毒,當(dāng)局放松財(cái)政刺激以助力經(jīng)濟(jì),燃料需求最快在四月就能開始恢復(fù)。
因?yàn)閲?guó)內(nèi)燃料需求低迷,煉廠削減了燃料生產(chǎn),今年中國(guó)原油進(jìn)口最少的月份將會(huì)是三月。新冠病毒開始出現(xiàn)的時(shí)候,中國(guó)正值傳統(tǒng)新年前夕,為一月底,二月初新年時(shí)期人們出游做準(zhǔn)備,燃料存儲(chǔ)量很高。之后病毒大爆發(fā)促使當(dāng)局嚴(yán)格限制旅行,不鼓勵(lì)出游,造成燃料供應(yīng)剩余。多余的燃料現(xiàn)在出口亞洲鄰國(guó),使成品油涌入本就脆弱的亞洲市場(chǎng)。
維托爾首席執(zhí)行官羅素·哈迪(Russell Hardy)上周表示,旅行禁令和低迷的經(jīng)濟(jì)活動(dòng)使中國(guó)現(xiàn)在減少了400萬(wàn)桶/天的石油需求。
然而這種需求減少不代表中國(guó)會(huì)縮減等量的原油進(jìn)口。
事實(shí)上,中國(guó)不過(guò)分削減進(jìn)口,有兩個(gè)的堅(jiān)實(shí)理由——這周的油價(jià)跌至一年多來(lái)的最低點(diǎn),這鼓勵(lì)了煉油商投機(jī)性買入,為今年晚些時(shí)候備貨,也使國(guó)家能用14個(gè)月來(lái)最便宜的原油填補(bǔ)其戰(zhàn)略性汽油儲(chǔ)備。
在各個(gè)假設(shè)中的未知數(shù)是,煉廠和中國(guó)有多少存儲(chǔ)容量來(lái)利用原油價(jià)格走低。由于中國(guó)庫(kù)存報(bào)告的不透明性,無(wú)人能確定中國(guó)如果不打算立即加工,能夠存儲(chǔ)多少的原油。
中國(guó)是全球主要的石油需求增長(zhǎng)動(dòng)力。如果能控制住新冠病毒的傳播,刺激經(jīng)濟(jì)生產(chǎn),原油進(jìn)口在三月底就能開始回升。
來(lái)源:Oilprice
China’s Oil Demand Could
Rebound Sooner Than Expected
China’s fuel demand has materially weakened after the coronavirus outbreak forced authorities to lock down cities and discourage travels.
Some estimates put the current demand loss in China at around 4 million barrels per day (bpd) of fuel.
Still, China’s crude oil imports are expected to have held up pretty well in February, slowing by just around 160,000 bpd compared to January import levels, according to Reuters columnist Clyde Russell who cites estimates from Refinitiv Oil Research.
Crude oil imports into the world’s top oil importer and key growth driver would be weaker in March than in February, because most of the February volumes had been contracted, set, and en route to China when the coronavirus outbreak put the brakes on fuel demand in the country.
March could be the month with the lowest Chinese crude imports this year, also because some refiners typically schedule maintenance between the winter and summer fuel seasons.
China’s top oil supplier and the world’s largest oil exporter, Saudi Arabia, is said to be cutting its crude exports to the world’s top oil importer by at least 500,000 bpd in March because of a slump in refinery demand amid the coronavirus outbreak.
Several factors point to materially lower Chinese crude oil imports in March, but a couple of other reasons also suggest that China’s crude imports will not fall off a cliff.
True, the demand loss is considerable, to the point of having all organizations and analysts, including the IEA, the EIA, and OPEC, slash their oil demand growth forecasts for 2020 by between 230,000 bpd and 400,000 bpd and now expecting this year’s global demand growth at 1 million bpd or less.
Before the coronavirus outbreak, all estimates pointed to demand growth picking up pace this year, thanks to the phase one U.S.-China trade deal and brighter prospects for the global economy.
With the coronavirus on the verge of becoming pandemic, analysts are cutting economic growth outlooks and the markets fear a significant hit to economies as the outbreak now spreads faster outside China than within China.
If China effectively contains the coronavirus in March and authorities loosen their stimulus purse strings to help the economy, fuel demand could begin to recover as early as in April.
The weakest month of China’s crude oil imports this year could be in March because refineries have slashed fuel production amid depressed domestic demand for fuels. The coronavirus came at a time in which fuel stocks were high in China in preparation of the Chinese New Year at the end of January and the beginning of February, when people typically travel a lot. The outbreak imposed strict travel restrictions and travel continues to be discouraged, so China found itself in an oversupply of fuels, which it now exports to neighboring Asian countries, flooding the already weak Asian market with more refined oil products.
Travel bans and lower economic activity cost China 4 million bpd of lost demand at the moment, Vitol’s chief executive Russell Hardy said last week.
This demand loss, however, doesn’t mean that China will be slashing crude oil imports by as much.
In fact, the world’s top oil importer has two very solid reasons not to slack off imports too much—oil prices trading this week at their lowest in more than a year, which could encourage opportunistic buying by refiners to stock up for later this year and for the state to fill in its strategic petroleum reserves with the cheapest crude in 14 months.
The unknowns in these assumptions are how much storage capacity refiners and China have to potentially take advantage of the low crude oil prices. Because of the opaque nature of China’s reporting of inventories, no one is really certain how much crude oil China could stock up if it doesn’t plan to process it immediately.
China is the world’s top oil demand growth driver and if it manages to soon contain the coronavirus outbreak and stimulate the economy, crude oil imports could begin rising again when March ends.