Monday, 24 October 2022

Ship survives drone attacks at Yemeni port

According to Seatrade Maritime News, Yemen’s Houthi militia has issued a warning to tankers loading at Yemeni oil terminals firing two armed drones at a Okeanis Eco Tankers VLCC as the vessel called for loading at the Al-Dabba oil terminal in Ash Shihr, Yemen. 

In a filing to the Oslo Stock Exchange, the Alafouzos-controlled company confirmed two “drone-driven explosions” in close proximity to its 300,000dwt newbuilding Nissos Kea on October 21, 2022.

The Greek owner of the Marshall Islands-flagged 2022-built tanker said it sustained no damage and no injuries to the crew in the attack which saw one drone explode ahead of it and another on its starboard side and came 14 minutes apart.

The Nissos Kea was scheduled to load 2 millio barrels of crude, but the vessel sailed from the loading port in international waters following the incident. “All necessary precautionary measures were duly taken beforehand and during the incident,” said Okeanis Eco Tankers.

The drone attack came two weeks after a cease-fire in the country’s civil war ended. Yemen’s Houthi militias said they were behind the attack, calling it a “warning strike.” to prevent pro-government forces from using terminals for oil exports. Meanwhile, the country’s Saudi-backed government said its forces had intercepted the drones.

The European Union (EU) said the flagrant menacing of international maritime commerce was unacceptable. “Houthi attacks on international shipping are an affront to core principles of the Law of the Sea, jeopardizing freedom of navigation through the region’s waterways and blocking access to Yemeni ports,” it added.

Cyprus-based, maritime security company Diaplous Group said: “The Company immediately emailed the Coast Guard to report the incident and request to stop. The coastguard warned that the vessel was in danger and prompted the master to abandon the operations at the terminal, to evacuate the area instantly and to inform accordingly when the vessel would be sailing in international waters.

Sunday, 23 October 2022

Will Rishi Sunak be next Prime Minister of Britain?

Rishi Sunak looked set to become next Prime Minister of Britain after Boris Johnson withdrew from the contest on Sunday. Although he enjoys enough support to make the final ballot he realizes the country and the Conservative Party needed unity.

If chosen, Sunak would be the first prime minister of Indian origin in the United Kingdom.

Johnson had raced home from a holiday in the Caribbean to try and secure the backing of 100 lawmakers to enter Monday's contest to replace Liz Truss, the woman who succeeded him in September after he was forced to quit over a string of scandals.

He said he had secured the backing of 102 lawmakers and could have been "back in Downing Street", but that he had failed to persuade either Sunak, or the other contender Penny Mordaunt, to come together "in the national interest".

"I believe I have much to offer but I am afraid that this is simply not the right time," Johnson said late on Sunday.

The former prime minister had secured the public backing of just under 60 Conservative lawmakers by Sunday, well under half of the nearly 150 endorsements Sunak had received.

Johnson's statement likely paves the way for his arch rival, the 42-year-old former finance minister Sunak, to become prime minister, possibly as soon as Monday. If confirmed, he would replace Truss who was forced to resign after she launched an economic program that triggered turmoil on financial markets.

According to the rules, if only one candidate secures the backing of 100 Conservative lawmakers, they will be named prime minister on Monday.

If two candidates pass the threshold, they will go forward to a vote of the party membership, with the winner announced on Friday, just days before new finance minister Jeremy Hunt lays bare the state of the country's finances in a budget plan due to be released on October 31, 2022.

That had raised concerns that Johnson would return to Downing Street with the backing of the party members, and not a majority of lawmakers in parliament, leaving the party badly divided. Hunt declared his backing for Sunak late on Sunday.

Some Johnson supporters could switch to Mordaunt, who has presented herself as the unity candidate, but many immediately switched to Sunak. A source close to the Mordaunt campaign said the former defence minister would continue in the contest.

"She is the unifying candidate who is most likely to keep the wings of the Conservative Party together," the source said.

Johnson has loomed large over British politics ever since he became mayor of London in 2008 and went on to become the face of the Brexit vote in 2016. While he led the Conservative Party to a landslide election in 2019, he was forced out just three years later by a rebellion of his ministers.

Sunak said he hoped Johnson would continue to contribute to public life "at home and abroad".

One Sunak supporter, who asked not to be named, said his main reaction was relief because if Johnson had won the "party would have torn itself apart".

Another Conservative lawmaker Lucy Allan said on Twitter: "I backed Boris for PM, but I think he has done the right thing for the country."

Other Johnson backers immediately jumped ship.

Cabinet office minister Nadhim Zahawi, who minutes earlier had published an article on the Daily Telegraph website praising Johnson, said "a day is a long time in politics".

"Rishi is immensely talented, will command a strong majority in the parliamentary Conservative Party, and will have my full support and loyalty," he said.

Earlier, many of the Conservative lawmakers who normally back Johnson switched their support to Sunak, saying the country needed a period of stability after months of turmoil that has sparked headlines - and raised alarm - around the world.

Johnson is also still facing a privileges committee investigation into whether he misled parliament over Downing Street parties during COVID-19 lockdowns. He could be forced to resign or be suspended from office if found guilty.

Sunak first came to national attention when, aged 39, he became finance minister under Johnson just as the COVID-19 pandemic arrived in Britain, developing a furlough scheme to support millions of people through multiple lockdowns.

"I served as your chancellor, helping to steer our economy through the toughest of times," Sunak said in a statement on Sunday. "The challenges we face now are even greater. But the opportunities - if we make the right choice - are phenomenal."

His family migrated to Britain in the 1960s, a period when many people from Britain's former colonies arrived to help rebuild the country after the Second World War.

After graduating from Oxford University, he later went to Stanford University where he met his wife Akshata Murthy, whose father is Indian billionaire N. R. Narayana Murthy, founder of outsourcing giant Infosys Ltd.

 

Israel claims curbing Iran’s ability to transfer weapons to Syria

The Israeli military has destroyed about 90% of Iran's military infrastructure and attempts to entrench itself - with Hezbollah - in Syria, top officials in the defense establishment claimed over the weekend.

According to the officials, Israel has in recent years succeeded in almost completely curbing Iran's ability to transfer weapons to Syria, to manufacture weapons on the country's soil and to establish a base in it with pro-Iranian forces.

According to the sources, the plan of the former commander of the Iranian Quds Force, Qassem Soleimani, who was killed by the Americans in 2020, has failed due to the IDF’s continued air campaign against the forces in Syria.

The last alleged attack attributed to Israel in Syria was Friday when local media reported that the IDF attacked near the airport in Damascus after about a month of relative silence.

The sources said that despite the tension between Israel and Russia – which recently threatened Jerusalem not to transfer arms to Ukraine - the deconfliction mechanism to prevent Russian-Israeli friction in Syria is working as usual.

Periods without attacks, the sources said, are usually the result of an Iranian decision to suspend the smuggling of weapons to Syria, in order to try and find a new route to trick Israel.

The security officials emphasized that the IDF severely damaged Iran's smuggling routes from the sea, from the air and even from the land from Iran to Syria.

As a result of the attacks, the ability of the Syrian army to produce weapons and ammunition has also been damaged since the Iranians and Hezbollah used the same factories for the production of their weapons.

The focus of the attacks in recent years has also been to stop the smuggling of components for CERS – the Centre D’Etudes et de Recherches Scientifiques (CERS) in Masyaf that is used by Iran to produce advanced missiles and weapons for its proxies.

Along with this, the assessment in Israel is that Syrian President Bashar Assad has reduced the activity of Iran and Hezbollah in his country, with an emphasis on the Syrian Golan Heights and the south of the country.

According to sources in Israel, Assad has realized that in the coming years he will not be able to regain territories occupied by the Kurds, including the Turks, and instead focuses his power on trying to restore stability to the major cities with an emphasis on Damascus and the region including the coastline.

 

Saturday, 22 October 2022

China: Reactions to 20th Communist Party Congress

Reuters has done a good job by compiling initial reactions on Xi Jinping securing a precedent-breaking third leadership term. However, if my readers find these tweaked, remember that the job was done by a western news agency.

China's Xi Jinping secured a precedent-breaking third leadership term on Sunday and introduced a new Politburo Standing Committee stacked with loyalists, cementing his place as the country's most powerful ruler since Mao Zedong. Following are the initial reactions from analysts and experts:

ALVIN TAN, HEAD OF ASIA FX STRATEGY, RBC CAPITAL MARKETS, SINGAPORE

“It does look like it’s dominated by Xi’s allies.”

“In terms of policymaking, it does mean that there is likely to be more deference to Xi Jinping’s own views about how to move the country and the economy forward... I can imagine that zero-COVID policy is likely more entrenched and there’s going to be further push on this issue of common prosperity and the like.”

DREW THOMPSON, VISITING SENIOR RESEARCH FELLOW AT NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF SINGAPORE'S LEE KUAN YEW SCHOOL OF PUBLIC POLICY

"This is a leadership that will be focused on achieving Xi’s political goals, rather than pursuing their own agendas for what they think is best for the country. There is only one correct way to govern, and that is Xi’s way.

"Foreign investors and businesses have desperately searched for signs that liberals or 'reformers' will play a role in shaping the economy or bringing back an old economic order that prioritized foreign investment and liberalization of the economy. It is clear from the outcome of the 20th Party Congress that national security and the party’s political security will take precedence over economic growth."

RICHARD McGREGOR, SENIOR FELLOW FOR EAST ASIA, LOWY INSTITUTE, SYDNEY

"The result was a resounding victory for Xi, more decisive than many experienced observers had forecast. All of his rivals, potential and real, have been forced out of the Politburo Standing Committee and Xi loyalists took their place. The new Politburo is an emphatic statement of Xi’s dominance over the party.

"I think the congress has drawn a line between the past and the future in profound ways, both for Chinese domestic politics and the way in which its influence spills out into the rest of the world.

"Xi has dispensed with the old factional system, such as it was. He has crushed expectations that he would nurture a successor. He has ignored the informal age caps on officials serving in top positions."

CHRIS MILLER, PROFESSOR AT TUFTS UNIVERSITY, MASSACHUSETTS

“The party congress has reaffirmed Xi's decisive role in ruling the Communist Party, marking a continued shift away from collective leadership of party elites toward a personalized dictatorship. It also appears to have confirmed the downgrading of economic growth as a key party goal, relative to other agenda items such as zero-COVID and the party's political and ideological control. On tech, the key theme was self-sufficiency in science and technology, which is to be expected given the increasing decoupling of the US and Chinese tech sectors.”

GARY NG, SENIOR ECONOMIST, ASIA PACIFIC, NATIXIS, HONG KONG

“The new inner circle will extend and heighten the current policy stance, and generally it seems that most of the newly appointed officials seem to be Xi’s key allies. So I guess this is also a move of the further consolidation of power, or maybe in the future, of course, performance is important, but also loyalty is increasingly a key concern when picking officials.”

JA IAN CHONG, POLITICAL SCIENTIST, NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF SINGAPORE

"It certainly seems to be a consolidation of Xi’s position. This means that policies will be more directly attached to Xi for good or ill. I guess that translates to more focus on party-state control over business, less dependence on imports even as the PRC (People's Republic of China) seeks to export. So probably more direct party-state direction of the economy. Investment will likely seek to meet those above goals, especially if they can bring in technology. So while there may be opportunities for investors, they have to look to both market forces and political preferences more. So more of what we have already been seeing.

"Probably no lifting of COVID-zero policy in the near future, and more assertiveness in foreign and security. Even more broadly, US-PRC friction will continue to grow."

DYLAN LOH, ASSISTANT PROFESSOR, NANYANG TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY

"It's quite clear that the Politburo have been stacked with Xi loyalists and that would mean he has a much freer rein and mandate in pursuing his domestic and foreign policies as collective leadership and decision making has been de-emphasized over coalescing around Xi and implementing his decisions. It seems that he has not elevated a potential successor for now, which gives him the flexibility for a fourth term. Regarding investment, I do not think China's policies will turn sharply because of this line up, I think by and large Xi's priorities have not changed."

"Wang Huning’s presence also indicates to me that the ideological bent of the party and Xi will continue and even deepen."

PEIQIAN LIU, CHINA ECONOMIST, NATWEST MARKETS, SINGAPORE

“It’s kind of in line and a surprise. What has been in line with expectations is really (that) President Xi is consolidating his power... And what’s been surprising is that there have been four people sort of retired from the Standing Committee – that’s more than our initial expectation of two.”

“It does look like Xi is having more say within the Politburo Standing Committee, and also with his ideology being written in the party’s charter, that’s a symbolization of him being more strategically important within the political committee.”

 

Saudi Arabia and China to work together to maintain oil market stability

Saudi and Chinese officials confirmed their willingness to work together to support stability in the international oil market. Prince Abdulaziz Bin Salman, Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Energy, held an online meeting with Zhang Jianhua, National Energy Administrator of the People's Republic of China.

During the video call, both sides confirmed that they would strengthen bilateral relations between the two countries in the field of energy.

They highlighted the significance of China and Saudi Arabia, as important global energy producers and consumers, regularly exchanging views.

The two sides confirmed their willingness to work together to support the stability of the international oil market, continue close communication, and strengthen cooperation to address emerging risks and challenges.

They also highlighted the importance of long-term and reliable oil supply to stabilize the global market that endures various uncertainties due to complex and changeable international situations, noting that the Kingdom continues to be China's most reliable partner and supplier of oil.

Discussions between the two sides covered cooperation and joint investments along the Belt and Road countries, as well as investments in integrated refining and petrochemical complexes in both countries and strengthening cooperation in the energy sector supply chain through establishing a regional hub for Chinese manufacturers to utilize the Kingdom's strategic location linking three continents.

The two sides agreed to cooperate within the framework of the Bilateral Cooperation Agreement in Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy between the Chinese and Saudi governments.

In addition, both ministers stressed the importance of cooperation in the field of electricity and renewables, and to collaborate in the field of clean hydrogen through research and development.

Friday, 21 October 2022

Modi turning Indian nonalignment policy into a business model

Subrahmanyam Jaishankar is the first career diplomat to serve as India's external affairs minister. Unlike many of his predecessors, he has also had experience in the private sector, serving as president of global corporate affairs for the Tata Group for about a year just before taking up his current role.

His unique background, coupled with the "Make in India" and "Atmanirbhar Bharat" driven by the administration of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to promote foreign investment and self-reliance, respectively, are reshaping Indian foreign policy.

Indian neutral position on Russian invasion of Ukraine has been the subject of considerable debate and discussions in media and policy circles. Many experts have attributed India's stance to its Cold War-era policy of nonalignment and its bonhomie with Russia, which dates back to those days.

The Indian government has justified its position as serving the country's national interests, rather than being a consequence of ideology. Its real geo-economic considerations go beyond realpolitik.

Unlike preceding administrations, the Modi government is not seeking to have one foot with the global South and one with the West in deference to the principle of nonalignment, nor is it motivated by what its developed-country partners call shared values.

Rather, behind the veneer of India's balancing act are trade and economic interests, particularly in terms of energy, defense, pharmaceuticals and high technology.

India is now poised to be the fastest-growing major economy this year, with the International Monetary Fund last week forecasting a gross-domestic product rise of 6.8%. This would be more than double the pace of China or the world as a whole at a time when developed countries look poised to enter recession.

Many economists have attributed India's strong growth to rising domestic consumption and its relative success at controlling inflation. But notably, the Indian finance ministry credits purchases of discounted Russian oil as a key factor in the country's strong macroeconomic performance.

Beyond cheap oil, India is also taking advantage of the growing geopolitical fractures to sell more arms abroad, increase space cooperation and develop markets for its pharmaceuticals.

Latin America has been a particular new area of focus, with the government setting up new consulates in Paraguay and the Dominican Republic and a state-owned fuel retailer looking to Brazil's Petrobras for supplies.

Visiting Argentina last month, Jaishankar pointedly used that country's name for the Falkland Islands, Islas Malvinas. This was not just a show of solidarity with a fellow member of the global South but part of a sales pitch for the Tejas fighter jet made by state-owned Hindustan Aeronautics.

Buenos Aires aims by year-end to finalize a decision between competing models, including offers for the US F-16, Russia's MiG-35, and the JF-17 made jointly by China and Pakistan.

The Tejas is billed as an affordable alternative to the F-16 and other Western fighters, and even to the JF-17. Priced at US$42 million a plane with an operating cost of around US$4,000 an hour, the Tejas is the cheapest lightweight combat aircraft available.

Indian Defense Minister Rajnath Singh promoted the Tejas on a visit to Egypt last month and other ministers have been traveling to the country as well. Hindustan Aeronautics is preparing to open its first overseas marketing office in Malaysia and considering adding others.

The Philippines, meanwhile, earlier this year finalized a US$375 million deal to buy supersonic BrahMos missiles from the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), another Indian state-owned arms producer. Vietnam is also a target market for Indian defense companies.

Indian arms makers have other advantages besides price over their established American rivals in pitching to countries in the global South. US arms makers are handcuffed by Washington's alliance policies, which fracture the world into camps. Thus the DRDO is working on a deal to sell Pinaka Mark-II guided missile systems to Armenia, a longtime Russian ally.

India's participation in the new I2U2 grouping with Israel, the US and the United Arab Emirates also shows how economic interests are taking precedence over past ideological priorities, in this case, support for the Palestinian cause.

That effort now yields little economic benefit for New Delhi while the I2U2 in July set plans for a US$2 billion series of food-sector industrial parks in India and a US$330 million renewable energy project in Modi's home state of Gujarat.

Modi's vision of "Make in India, make for the world" still faces many hurdles, including the country's aversion to free trade deals and other protectionist policies, but turning top government officials into business development managers charged with cultivating foreign markets is one way to advance the effort.

Indian concept of a multipolar world can be more than geopolitical balancing between global powers but also a geoeconomic endeavor carefully crafted to take advantage of different opportunities in each country.

 

 

Pakistan Stock Exchange: Investors remain on sidelines

During the week ended on October 21, 2022, the focus of investors remained on the current account position, besides the upcoming FATF plenary. The benchmark index remained flat and closed at 42,213 points, up 0.6%WoW. The average volume for the index continued downward trajectory, dropping to 228 million shares down 14.4%WoW.

Major news flows during the week included: 1) Q1FY23 Current Account deficit down by 37%YoY, 2) Trade deficit shrinks by 30.2%YoY in September, 3) Gas sector circular debt bloats to Rs1.5 trillion, 4) Pakistan receives only US$88 million assistance against US$816 million flash appeal, 5) Pakistan seeks rescheduling of US$27 billion debt and vi) country’s foreign exchange reserves inches up to US$13.250 billion.

The top performing sectors were: Tobacco, Close-end Mutual funds, Synthetic & Rayon, Modarabas and Power Generation & Distribution, while the least favorite sectors were: Woolen, Textile Weaving, Sugar & Allied Industries, Oil & Gas Marketing and Automobile Parts & Accessories.

The top performing scrips in the KSE-100 were: PAKT, HGFA, PGLC, SNGP and AKBL, while laggards included: BNWM, SHEL, HCAR, NRL and SRVI.

Foreigners emerged the biggest sellers, offloading US$3.4 million followed by Banks & DFI (US$1.5 million), Mutual funds (US$1.3 million), Companies (US$0.4 million) and Other Organizations (US$0.2 million). While Individuals, Brokers and Insurance Companies were on the buying side, with a net buy of US$5.4 million, US$0.9 million and US$0.6 million respectively.

Amid the volatile local political situation, the name of the game is waiting and seeing. If the political turmoil dampens, some may view it as a bull-trigger for the market, while the potential of anarchy may keep some away. Moreover, with the outcome of the FATF plenary scheduled to be announced on Friday night, the result will boost/suppress the market.

It is likely that the country will be removed from the grey list of the global money laundering and terrorism financing watchdog, which will in turn increase the flows of foreign funding into the equity market.

The PKR continued its decline which started last week and lost 1.1%WoW owing to the speculation regarding changes in the Finance Ministry. Keeping in view the uncertainty, near-term outlook for the equity market remains hazy as both bear and bull-run triggers loom overhead.

Thursday, 20 October 2022

United States accuses Iran aiding Russia


The White House on Thursday accused Iran for supporting Russia in attacks on Ukraine with Iranian drones launched from Crimean Peninsula with on the ground assistance from military trainers.

National Security spokesperson John Kirby raised concern that Russia will seek to acquire advanced conventional weapons from Tehran as it faces military supply shortages under pressure from Western sanctions. 

“We can confirm that Russia’s military personnel that are based in Crimea have been piloting Iranian UAVs [unmanned aerial vehicles], using these to conduct strikes across Ukraine, including strikes against Kyiv in just recent days. We assess that Iranian military personnel on the ground in Crimea assisted Russia in these operations,” Kirby said.

“There’s extensive proof of their use by Russia against both military and civilian targets in Ukraine, yet both Iran and Russia continue to lie about it,” he added. 

Kirby said that the US cannot offer exact numbers on how many Iranians are in Crimea, adding that it’s a relatively small number but that they are providing tech support while the Russians pilot the UAVs for attacks. 

“Russia has received dozens of UAVs so far, and will likely continue to receive additional shipments in the future,” he said.

He added that the administration is exploring new sanctions and that the Department of Defense is looking actively at potential air defense solutions for the Ukrainians.

Russian attacks with Iranian kamikaze drones have terrorized Ukraine over the past two weeks, with civilian casualties and infrastructure, including residential buildings, energy and water supplies, destroyed by the explosive-laden drones.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has pleaded for supporting countries to send more air defense systems immediately.

The US and NATO said they are working to quickly send more air defenses and anti-drone technology to Ukraine, while other air defense systems from Spain and Germany are said to have recently arrived.

Ukrainians have pleaded for more, in particular to Israel for its Iron Dome missile defense system, which is considered one of the most successful air defense systems at targeting indiscriminate fire. 

Israel has rejected sharing the Iron Dome a decision that Kirby said was their sovereign right. 

He said the Pentagon is looking hard at what what’s in the realm of the possible, for air defenses for Ukraine, including, as I said earlier, what could be possible from allies and partners.

 

CENTCOM commander visits US ballistic missile submarine in Arabian Sea

US CENTCOM Commander General Michael Kurilla visited the USS West Virginia nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine at an undisclosed location in international waters in the Arabian Sea on Wednesday, United States Central Command announced.

Kurilla was joined by Vice Admiral Brad Cooper, Commander of the US Navy's Fifth Fleet and NAVCENT. Kurilla received a hands-on demonstration of the capabilities of the vessel during the visit.

These submarines are the crown jewel of the nuclear triad, and the West Virginia demonstrates the flexibility, survivability, readiness and capability of USCENTCOM and USSTRATCOM forces at sea" said Kurilla.

The West Virginia is one of six ballistic-missile submarines stationed at Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay, Georgia. The submarine can carry up to 20 submarine-launched ballistic missiles with multiple warheads. The submarine is equipped with Trident D5 submarine-launched ballistic missiles, each of which can be armed with up to eight 475 kiloton W88 nuclear warheads which can each be aimed toward a separate target. 

Each W88 warhead has a yield about 23 times larger than the "Fat Man" nuclear bomb dropped on Nagasaki. A blast caused by such a weapon would likely destroy most structures within a 4.9- to 6-kilometer radius and cause 3rd degree burns to people within about 8 kilometers of the blast site, according to the MIT Nuclear Weapons Education Project.

The announcement by CENTCOM was marked as unusual by analysts, as the US does not usually reveal the location of its ballistic missile submarines.

The visit to the USS West Virginia comes amid concerns that Russia could use tactical nuclear weapons in its continuing invasion of Ukraine and as Iran continues to provide drones to Russia for it to use against Ukraine and plans to provide ballistic missiles as well.

NATO is also holding its annual nuclear deterrence exercise over north-western Europe which will continue until October 30.

The exercise involves 14 countries and up to 60 aircraft, including fighter jets and surveillance and tanker aircraft. The exercise, called "Steadfast Noon," is hosted by a different NATO ally each year.

The visit also comes as China continues to up its rhetoric against Taiwan and as attempts to return to the JCPOA nuclear deal with Iran remain stalled.

On Monday, Robert Malley, the US Special Representative for Iran, told CNN that attempts to revive the JCPOA nuclear deal are "not on the US agenda as they have been stalled for two months due to Iranian demands.

"Iran is making demands that have nothing to do with the JCPOA and as long as that's the case the talks will be stalled," said Malley, adding that the US continues to believe that diplomacy is the best way to stop Iran from attaining nuclear weapons.

Wednesday, 19 October 2022

Rising diesel exports to Europe

Oil traders are ramping up diesel exports from Asia and the Middle East to Europe in October to profit from a wide price gap between the regions as weeks-long strikes at French refineries have tightened stocks, although a steep backwardation may cap volumes, according to trade sources and shipping data.

The price spread between front-month Singapore 10 ppm sulphur gasoil swaps and the ICE low sulphur gasoil futures contract, also known as exchange of futures for swaps (EFS) , was close to minus US$150 a ton on Wednesday, versus minus US$29 a year ago, data on Refinitiv Eikon showed, making it attractive for traders to send oil to Europe.

"East of Suez is sending everything they can ship... it's just a question of how much China exports in November," a Europe-based trader said.

For October, around 289,000 tons of gasoil will be loaded from South Korea and China to northwest Europe, up from 137,500 tons in September, ship tracking data from Refinitiv showed.

Exports from India and the Middle East for October to northwest Europe were at around 480,000 tons and 834,000 tons respectively, as compared to 361,000 tons and 511,310 tons a month ago, the data showed.

The trader estimated that Europe may import about 3 million tons (750,000-850,000 barrels per day) from east of Suez in November, of which the Middle East could account for two-third of the volume. Traders expect the bulk of supplies to Europe to come from India and the Middle East, on shorter shipping times.

Asia's top fuel exporters in South Korea and Taiwan have issued a flurry of spot tenders this month, while China will also step up diesel exports after Beijing increased allocation.

However, outages at TotalEnergies' refineries in France caused by worker strikes since September have led prompt diesel prices to surge versus those in future months, a market structure known as backwardation, posing risks to the value of oil cargoes that travel over long distance such as from Asia to Europe.

Steep backwardation, which is already deterring traders from storing diesel globally, may prevent the much-needed heating fuel from reaching Europe this winter as the region is scaling back on imports from top supplier Russia ahead of a European Union embargo in February.

"Some end consumers were stockpiling Russian diesel but now with French strikes, the market has tightened up and we have brutal backwardation," a Europe-based trader said.

"So there is a big commercial incentive to draw stocks, which will make it worse to buy diesel."

Northwest European diesel barge profit margins rose to over US$83 a barrel on Tuesday, a record high, amid supply tightness.

Already soaring diesel prices in the United States have led traders to divert several cargoes heading from the Middle East to Europe to the New York harbour area, further constraining supplies in Europe.

"European gasoil cracks could come down even further up to US$15 a barrel once the strikes end, making it risky for Asian barrels to head over here even on a prompt loading basis given the strong backwardation, although the arbitrage is technically open on paper," said Mark Williams, a research director at Wood Mackenzie.

 

Tuesday, 18 October 2022

OPEC Plus endorse output cut despite US coercion accusation

OPEC Plus member states lined up to endorse the steep cut to its output target agreed this month after the White House, stepping up a war of words with Saudi Arabia, accused Riyadh of coercing some other nations into supporting the move.

The United States last week said the cut would boost Russia's foreign earnings and suggested it had been engineered for political reasons by Saudi Arabia, which denied it was supporting Moscow in its invasion of Ukraine.

Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz said the kingdom was working hard to support stability and balance in oil markets, including establishing and maintaining agreement of the OPEC Plus alliance.

The Saudi Defence Minister, Prince Khalid bin Salman, King Salman's son also said the October 05 decision to reduce output by 2 million barrels per day (bpd) - despite supply tightness in oil markets - was unanimous and based on economic factors.

His comments were backed by ministers of several OPEC Plus member states including the United Arab Emirates.

The UAE's Energy Minister, Suhail al-Mazrouei, wrote on Twitter,"I would like to clarify that the latest Group decision, which was unanimously approved, was a pure technical decision, with NO political intentions whatsoever."

His comment followed a statement from Iraq's state oil marketer SOMO.

"There is complete consensus among OPEC Plus countries that the best approach ...is a pre-emptive approach that supports market stability and provides the guidance needed for the future," a SOMO statement said.

Kuwait Petroleum Corporation Chief Executive Nawaf Saud al-Sabah also welcomed the decision by OPEC Plus and said the country was keen to maintain a balanced oil market, state news agency KUNA reported.

Oman and Bahrain echoed the comment in separate statements.

Algerian energy minister Mohamed Arkab, meanwhile, called the decision historic and said that he and OPEC Secretary General Haitham Al Ghais expressed full confidence in it, Algeria's Ennahar TV reported.

In a statement to Reuters on Monday, Arkab said the OPEC Plus decision, was a purely technical response based on purely economic considerations.

Oil inventories in major economies are lower than when OPEC has cut output in the past. Some analysts have said that recent volatility in crude markets could be remedied by a cut that would help attract investors.

Umer Karim, a research fellow at the University of Birmingham, said OPEC countries are attempting to project unity.

"The emphasis on the word technical also suggests that these member states are sending a message to the US that they are not a party in this row between Riyadh and Washington," Karim said.

US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby on Thursday said that more than one" OPEC member had felt coerced by Saudi Arabia into the vote, adding that the cut would also increase Russia's revenue and blunt the effectiveness of sanctions imposed over its invasion of Ukraine.

King Salman said in an address to the Kingdom's Advisory Shura Council that the country was a mediator of peace and highlighted the crown prince's initiative to release prisoners of war from Russia last month.

Khalid bin Salman said he was astonished by claims his country was standing with Russia in its war with Ukraine.

 

Darnomics or Illusion

Without mincing words, allow me to say that Pakistan’s Finance Minister, Ishaq Dar, is busy in creating illusion that with his taking rein of finance an era of prosperity has begun. His premise that Rupee has got stronger against US dollar is nothing but gimmickry.

Let me remind my readers around the world that lately US dollar was made stronger artificially by the US administration. The US also wanted to create illusion that hike in energy prices around the world has failed in denting economy of the country.

One may recall that lately when OPEC Plus decided to curtail output, Joe Biden, President, United States was most furious. He knows that hike in motor gasoline is bringing down his popularity graph, which may led to defeat of his party in the mid-term elections.

Therefore, the attempts by Dar to show that Rupee is getting stronger are ‘misplaced’. In this endeavor, Pakistan is bound to lose more of its limited foreign exchange reserves.

This is also to remind him that in Pakistan there is a huge mismatch between the inflow and outflow of dollars. IMF tranche may have provided a breather, but the quantum of debt servicing is grossly unmanageable.

The brutal fact is that the recent floods have devastated country’s agriculture, displaced millions of people and their rehabilitation requires millions of dollars. If I am right bulk of the aid has come in kind and whatever paltry amounts have come is ’peanuts’ only.

This is to also remind the Minister that higher interest rate and persistent hike in electricity and gas tariffs are rendering Pakistani manufacturers, particularly exporters of textiles and clothing, uncompetitive in the global markets.

It is writing on the wall that imports will go up and exports will come down, widening the current account deficit. Since Dar has no control over imports, Pakistan’s only savior could be exporters. However, the lust to collect more PDL to bridge budget deficit is killing golden-egg layer, textiles and clothing industry.

Although, I am not an admirer of Miftah Ismail, any attempt to portray Dar as savior is like building an empire on the dead body of another person. If the readers are unable to understand this narrative let me say, “Miftah was used to announce all the bad decisions and Dar is being projected as a Savior”.

To conclude allow me to say, “The incumbent government has no clue whatsoever regarding pulling the country out of current economic crisis, all its policies can be termed ‘firefighting’ but the fire is too big and water is too little.”

    

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cunningly US has dragged EU into Ukraine war

With no end in sight to the fighting in Ukraine, the European Union has become financially exhausted with the drawn-out conflict on its doorstep. As against this, United States, sitting across the pond, is watching on as well as making huge profits. As the war drags on, the costs for Europe are mounting.

One thing is for sure. It is certainly not the first time Washington has tricked the international community into a war. One can still recall the US sending fake intelligence, to the UN Security Council to make the case for the Iraq war.

At the time, France and Germany formed a coalition, making strong arguments and objections to prevent the Iraq war. 

This time, critics argue EU members caved in too quickly and are acting as US proxies without even being aware of it.

Before the conflict broke out on Europe’s doorstep in February, Russia regularly accused the US of deliberately creating a scenario that was designed to lure Moscow into war while ignoring Russia's security concerns over Ukraine.

The Pentagon led the mobilization of NATO troops and weapons on Russian borders and Europe quietly followed suit. The security concerns expressed by the Kremlin were ignored by Washington despite many experts describing them as legitimate.

Moscow wanted the West to respect an agreement signed in 1999 that no country can threaten its security at the expense of others. The Kremlin said this was at the heart of the crisis before the conflict broke out.  

The question must be asked, why not sending peace delegations to Russia and Ukraine instead of arms packages? The answer is the American economy crashed in the aftermath of the covid-19 pandemic and now it is growing again as a result of the war. America has a long history of making money out of waging or triggering wars across the planet.

Those paying the price on this occasion are European states with the continent slipping into a recession and ordinary households failing to make ends meet.

Reportedly, the EU has set aside fund to reimburse member states with the money they spend on sending weapons to Ukraine. However, the EU has been flooded with requests that the bloc simply cannot cover. Brussels has reportedly not even sent out the first payment.

The news outlet cites diplomats as saying the EU had estimated it could cover some 85% of the costs but so many requests were sent to the bloc’s headquarters that it revised that number down to 46%.

That is said to have angered Poland, which is one of the EU’s largest arms exporters to Ukraine and a leading seeker for reimbursements. The diminishing payback scheme and struggling attempts to reimburse risks damaging the EU’s reputation.

The argument coming out of Brussels is that at times like these, unlike the Iraq war, the Western allies must stick together with the United States.

What allies is Brussels exactly referring to? Europeans are struggling to heat their homes this winter because of the Ukraine war. France and Germany’s request for US gas supplies to alleviate the crisis in “ally” states were met with “astronomical” prices by Washington.

There is no doubt the US is making astronomical gas sale profits from the Ukraine war. The US oil giant Chevron, also a large global natural gas producer, is expected to make record exports to Europe.

"We have seen a big uptick in demand from European customers so we are adjusting to that," said Colin Parfitt, who oversees the company's shipping, pipeline, supply and trading operations. Europe will not "go back to the same flows from Russia as it did before," he said.

The US achieved its long term desire to replace Russian gas flows to Europe with its own stocks of liquefied natural gas (LNG). For years Washington has been demanding Europe to wean itself off Russian gas and the Ukraine war has met that demand, even slapping sanctions on Russia’s Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline to Germany. At the time, Berlin strongly censured the move.

American energy companies are now reaping in the profits. "What's growing in the United States is demand for exports," Parfitt said.

According to the Energy Information Administration, the US became the top LNG exporter in the first half of 2022, because of increased supplies to Europe amid the Ukraine crisis. Exports rose to average 11.2 billion cubic feet per day compared with the second half of 2021.

The fact is Europe has no choice but to purchase American energy as Washington has imposed sanctions on certain other major gas-producing countries. But why is the US selling at “astronomical” prices to its “allies”. The answer is American politicians, energy giants and arms manufacturers don’t really care about Europe.

Senior officials in France and Germany have even accused the US of overcharging for its LNG and using the war in Ukraine and the energy crisis to make profit and make Europe dependent on US gas.

French Finance Minister Bruno Le Mair recently noted the US should not be allowed to dominate the global energy market as its allies in Europe are suffering from the consequences of the Ukraine conflict.

He also said it is unacceptable for the US to sell LNG at prices four times higher than those paid by companies in America. The French Minister also called for the establishment of a more balanced relationship between the US and Europe.

The German Economy Minister Robert Habeck decried American LNG companies of charging too much for gas at a time when Europe’s biggest economy is struggling to balance its energy mix without Russian supplies.

He also recalled how the US has turned to the EU before when crude oil costs were skyrocketing, and that Europe’s national reserves were used at the time to push the prices back down.
At a time that the EU is in crisis, with friends like the US who needs enemies? Of course, American arms manufacturers are also making gigantic profits. They are shipping weapons to the warzone in Eastern Europe.

In the lead up to the war, President Putin said Russia needs to defend itself from an aggressive and hostile America. Washington is not primarily concerned with Ukraine's security, but with containing Russia, Putin said.

"In this sense, Ukraine itself is just an instrument to achieve this goal, this can be done in different ways, by drawing us into some kind of armed conflict and, with the help of their allies in Europe, forcing the introduction against us of those harsh sanctions they are talking about now in the US" he said at the time.

The consequences of the conflict have been felt by Europeans who have been staging mass protests, strikes and voting governments out of power across the continent. While the war has triggered soaring costs that the European public simply cannot afford, it has also frustrated hopes of any normalization in Europe following the covid-19 pandemic as well as European unity.

Studies show there is growing polarization in Europe as to whether supporting the US into triggering the Ukraine crisis was worth it after all?