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Asian Oil Imports Dropped in April

Chinese Power Demand Is Set To Soar

1. A Flotilla of US Oil Is Moving Toward Asia

- Deliveries of US crude to Asia are set to reach an all-time high this month, soaring to 1.8 million b/d as the relative discount of WTI to other global benchmarks makes American barrels increasingly profitable.

- As recently as a couple of days ago WTI still traded at a 9 per barrel discount to Brent and a 6 per barrel discount to the Asian benchmark Dubai, with South Korea, China, and India all joining the buying spree.

- South Korea will remain the biggest buyer of US crude regionally, importing a record 620,000 b/d in November, while China will receive the highest volume since December 2020 (approximately 450,000 b/d).

- Chinese buying is particularly noteworthy as it comes after the huge 15-million-ton product export quota allocated in September, driving refinery runs much higher since.

2. China Woes Sink Bright Prospects for Iron Ore

- Iron ore has become one of the poorest performing commodities this year, writes Bloomberg, with Asian futures falling for seven straight months already, the worst run on record.

- Still overly dependent on Chinese demand, iron ore futures have dropped to almost $80 per metric ton, a third of what they were at their May 2022 peak.

- China's Communist Party congress failed to introduce large-scale stimulus measures for the country's real estate, which combined with anti-pollution curbs and government-mandated steel output quotas makes…

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