
Saudi Arabia dropped the price of its flagship crude grade to Asia for a third month on persistent signs of oversupply in the market.
State producer Saudi Aramco reduced the price of its Arab Light grade for customers in Asia to a 30-cent premium to the regional benchmark for February, according to a price list seen by Bloomberg. That was broadly in line with a Bloomberg survey of traders and refiners.
The cut comes as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and some of its allies stuck with plans to pause supply increases in the first quarter.
In their meeting over the weekend, delegates said they didn’t discuss Venezuela during the 10-minute video conference, and that it’s premature to gauge how the United States’ capture of the South American country’s leader Nicolas Maduro will impact supplies.
Aramco also lowered prices of its barrels across all grades to every other region as well, including the US and Europe.
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Global crude benchmarks retreated by about a fifth last year, with Brent posting its worst annual decline since 2020, on mounting concerns about a worldwide glut following an earlier round of supply hikes from OPEC+ and rising output from rival drillers.
The International Energy Agency has forecast a surplus of about 3.8 million barrels a day for this year.
Middle East crude markets have also weakened, with the forward curve for grades including the Dubai benchmark and Abu Dhabi’s Murban futures slowly giving up their bullish price structures in recent weeks.
