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Page added on May 17, 2018

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Asian oil demand surges

Asian oil demand surges thumbnail

Oil prices are poised to break through $80 per barrel and Asia’s demand is at a record, pushing the cost of the region’s thirst for crude to $1 trillion this year, about twice what it was during the market lull of 2015/2016.

FILE PHOTO: Motorists drives past an electronic board at a gas station in Paranaque city, Metro Manila, the Philippines February 4, 2016. REUTERS/Erik De Castro/File Photo

Oil prices have gained 20 percent since January to just shy of $80 per barrel LCOc1, a level not seen since 2014. [O/R]

With the U.S. dollar .DXY – in which virtually all oil is traded – also growing stronger, concerns are rising that economies will take a hit, especially in import-reliant Asia. Surging costs could have an inflationary effect that will hurt both consumers and companies.

“Asia is most vulnerable to an oil price spike,” Canadian investment bank RBC Capital Markets warned in a note this month, after oil prices hit their highest since November 2014.

Asia-Pacific consumes more than 35 percent of the 100 million barrels of oil the world uses each day, according to industry data, with the region’s global share steadily rising.

Asia is also the world’s smallest oil producing region, accounting for less than 10 percent of output.

(GRAPHIC: reut.rs/2wLchCf)

INFLATION, RISING COSTS

U.S. bank Morgan Stanley said this week that diesel use contributes 10-20 percent to cash costs for miners, while oil contributes from 4 percent to 50 percent to the cost of power generation, depending on a company’s or country’s fuel mix.

“A rising oil price therefore shifts the entire cost curve higher,” it said.

China is by far Asia’s – and the world’s – biggest importer of oil, ordering 9.6 million barrels per day in April. That’s almost 10 percent of global consumption.

At current prices, this amounts to a Chinese oil import bill of $768 million per day, $23 billion per month – a whopping $280 billion a year.

Other Asian countries are even more exposed to rising oil prices. Most damage will be done to countries like India and Vietnam, which not only rely heavily on imports, but also where national wealth is not yet large enough to absorb sudden increases in fuel costs.

“Poorer countries with limited borrowing capacity may face financing difficulty amid higher import bills,” RBC said.

Unless fuel is heavily subsidized, households and businesses in poorer countries are also more vulnerable to rising oil prices than they are in wealthier nations.

In developing economies like India, Vietnam or the Philippines, fuel costs eat up around 8-9 percent of an average person’s salary, according to Reuters research and figures from statistics portal Numbeo. That compares to just 1-2 percent in wealthy countries like Japan or Australia.

(GRAPHIC: reut.rs/2wLchCf)

FILE PHOTO: A worker fills a car with diesel at a fuel station in Jammu August 29, 2013. REUTERS/Mukesh Gupta/File Photo

DIESEL & LOGISTICS

The surge in oil prices has a particularly big impact on transport and logistics companies. One such firm in Asia is courier LBC Express Holdings (LBC.PS) in the Philippines.

“LBC has been intently watching the movement of crude oil prices … What we, at LBC, are preparing for are the effects an oil price increase may have on our carriers: airlines, shipping lines, trucking companies,” its Chief Financial Officer Enrique V. Rey Jr said.

The high oil price “challenges us to improve our own efficiencies to achieve better economies of scale and maintain our margins,” he said.

Some firms say they will pass on any higher costs to consumers.

Chryss Alfonsus Damuy, President and Chief Executive at Philippine firm Chelsea Logistics (CLC.PS), said his firm could be affected by higher oil prices, but “we can pass on the effect to consumer via price adjustments.”

Others said if they burden consumers with higher costs, they will lose clients.

LBC.PSPhilippine Stock Exchange
-0.08(-0.52%)
LBC.PS
  • LBC.PS
  • CLC.PS

Ashish Savla, owner of 50-truck strong Pravin Roadways in Mumbai, India, said diesel accounts for more than half of his company’s expenses, and that it was difficult to pass rising expenses on to customers.

“Diesel prices have jumped 16 percent in a year, but I couldn’t raise freight charges by 5 percent. If I charge more, clients will use cheaper railroads,” Savla said.

Anil Mittal, who runs a container logistics company and is a member of Bombay Goods Transport Association, said his firm was “already operating at wafer-thin margins” before prices rose.

The “diesel price hike has hit our business hard,” he said. Many small transport firms like his “are struggling to pay back bank loans they took to buy trucks.”

Given the economic costs and its reliance on imports, economists say it is time for Asia to limit its exposure to oil.

“It is very important for Asia to reduce its oil dependency and increase its energy efficiency … to protect itself from future oil shocks,” RBC Capital Markets said.

Reuters



5 Comments on "Asian oil demand surges"

  1. Duncan Idaho on Thu, 17th May 2018 3:02 pm 

    “Diesel prices have jumped 16 percent in a year, but I couldn’t raise freight charges by 5 percent. If I charge more, clients will use cheaper railroads,”

    If there is one thing India is quite good at, its railroads.

    But India will be one of the first majors over the cliff.

  2. Boat on Thu, 17th May 2018 11:17 pm 

    A slowdown in the world’s economies would be good. Maybe if you can’t afford gas you won’t have another kid.

  3. deadly on Fri, 18th May 2018 5:47 am 

    There needs to be a surge in the number of human deaths.

    The Asians burn coal like there is no tomorrow. Four billion Asians burning more than fifty percent of the coal consumed in one year is pure greed. You are not being a good steward of the planet, you’re guilty of over-consumption, stop being such greedy pigs, you filthy swine. lol

    They can get by without any oil, especially Indonesia. They sold all of their oil to California way back when and Gov. Brown is the beneficiary of that oil money inheritance.

    Somehow, everybody else is supposed to pay, carbon tax, more renewables, etc. while Gov Brown enjoys a life of luxury and everyone else pays through the nose. lol

    Cognitive dissonance anyone? Bueller?

    Freaking stupid hypocrites, Taxes and fees for thee, no such thing for me. Governor Brown is a hypocrite, non-pareil. Go figure, Jerry is a classic stupid idiot.

    A fraud, a phony, the old useful idiot, the Village Idiot of California.

    Uff da, beam me up.

    What a wonderful world.

    Let’s burn more oil and coal, makes for a great Chinese take-out.

    Have a good day drinking like a fool.

  4. Peter on Fri, 18th May 2018 6:42 am 

    Deadly

    Global population is 7.6 Billion, so according to you 4.4 Billion Asians are 60% of the world’s population. Surely they should burn more than half the worlds coal.

  5. Plantagenet on Fri, 18th May 2018 9:48 am 

    “If there is one thing India is quite good at, its railroads.”

    Have you ever been on a railroad in India? The Indian railroad system is a relic that is mostly unchanged from British colonial times 70 years ago. The stations are the same, the tracks and routes are the same, the road crossings are the same. Even many of the cars are the same. The biggest difference is that you’ve got 1.2 billion Indians trying to get on a train system designed for a population of one tenth the size.

    Cheers!

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