Several liquefied natural gas (LNG)
cargoes that had been stored on vessels in Asian waters are now heading towards
buyers’ terminals in China, Japan or South Korea as spot prices for the
super-chilled fuel have plunged this week to multi-month lows.
At least nine LNG tankers are now on
their way or have already offloaded cargoes to buyers after floating off
Singapore, Malaysian or South China waters for up to two months, shipping data
from Refinitiv Eikon showed.
The data also shows that at least
five laden LNG tankers remain in Singapore waters. Three of them have been
there holding LNG in storage since the second half of October.
Storing LNG on tankers is generally
seen as a riskier bet than holding crude oil on the water, given higher storage
costs and the fact that LNG cargoes degrade over time by evaporating.
“When the traders started floating
the cargoes, the market was in a contango of about $1, but it has now flipped
into backwardation, so there is more urgency to sell the cargoes,” a
Singapore-based trader said.
Data intelligence company Kpler
estimates that of 18 LNG tankers it flagged as floating storage in the
Asia-Pacific region last week, 13 are still floating gas, based on speed, days
since loading, and lack of destination and diversions.
A contango is a market structure in
which prices for cargoes loading in the current month are lower than those
loading in forward months. A backwardated structure is the opposite.
Spot LNG prices in Asia LNG-AS are
currently trading below $9 per million British thermal units (mmBtu) and could
be as low as $8.50 per mmBtu for cargoes being delivered to North Asia, two
Singapore-based traders said.
Spot LNG prices for Asia in Eikon
are usually updated weekly on Fridays.
The prices given by the traders this
week would be the lowest in nearly seven months, and about 15 percent cheaper
than last year at the same time, Reuters data showed.
“These are not even the distressed
cargoes … Those will likely be sold at lower prices,” one of the two traders
said.
A warmer-than-average winter has
meant that on-shore natural gas storage levels have been high in top importing
countries in Asia, including China, Japan and South Korea.
Chinese companies also purchased
their winter requirements earlier this year, helping to spread out their spot
purchases.
The availability of some of the
tankers after discharge has helped to ease LNG tanker rates.
Still, the market remains well
supplied, with at least two LNG tankers from Europe that were headed to Asia
diverting to other destinations, data from Kpler and Refinitiv Eikon showed.
Source: Reuters (Reporting by Jessica Jaganathan; Editing by Tom Hogue)
Source: Reuters (Reporting by Jessica Jaganathan; Editing by Tom Hogue)
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