S&P Global Offerings
Featured Topics
Featured Products
Events
S&P Global Offerings
Featured Topics
Featured Products
Events
S&P Global Offerings
Featured Topics
Featured Products
Events
S&P Global Offerings
Featured Topics
Featured Products
Events
Solutions
Capabilities
Delivery Platforms
News & Research
Our Methodology
Methodology & Participation
Reference Tools
Featured Events
S&P Global
S&P Global Offerings
S&P Global
Research & Insights
Solutions
Capabilities
Delivery Platforms
News & Research
Our Methodology
Methodology & Participation
Reference Tools
Featured Events
S&P Global
S&P Global Offerings
S&P Global
Research & Insights
13 Dec 2021 | 05:45 UTC
Highlights
Asian naphtha activity for first-half February delivery into North Asia is slated to begin during the week, as the trading cycle rolls forward Dec. 16.
The sentiment in the Asian naphtha market has been bearish amid increasing Western arbitrage supply and low LPG prices that have dampened demand.
Naphtha blendstock demand was expected to firm during the week, as the reforming spread -- the difference between Singapore 92 RON gasoline and Singapore naphtha derivative -- grew 87 cents/b week on week to $8.70/b at the Asian close Dec. 10, hitting a six-week high, S&P Global Platts data showed. The spread was last higher at $9.56/b Oct. 29. A wider spread makes it economically viable for gasoline producers to use naphtha as a blendstock.
Downstream weakness narrowed the key paraxylene CFR Taiwan/China marker and the C+F Japan naphtha cargo spread by $14.30/mt on the week to $129.21/mt Dec. 10, Platts data showed. It was still below the typical breakeven of around $280-$300/mt and likely to keep run rates at splitters low, sources said.
Trading was dull for Asian octane blendstocks at the start of the week Dec. 13, due to bearish sentiment in the naphtha, toluene, and isomer-grade mixed xylene markets. The market was held up by the Asian MTBE complex, which was expected to move in line with firm gasoline and crude oil markets.
ICE February Brent crude futures were at $76.13/b at 12:30 pm Singapore time Dec. 13, up $1.87/b, or 2.52%, from the Asian close Dec. 10.