Monday, July 23, 2012

Reuters: Regulatory News: COLUMN-Nexen buy moves China into heart of global oil benchmark: Campbell

Reuters: Regulatory News
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COLUMN-Nexen buy moves China into heart of global oil benchmark: Campbell
Jul 23rd 2012, 14:58

Mon Jul 23, 2012 10:58am EDT

  By Robert Campbell      NEW YORK, July 23 (Reuters) - Chinese state-backed oil  producer CNOOC Ltd will get more than just more crude  oil assets with its $15.1 billion takeover of Canada's Nexen Inc  .      The acquisition will also move CNOOC into the heart of the  North Sea BFOE physical oil benchmark, giving a Chinese company  for the first time unprecedented insight and access into this  secretive, yet enormously influential market.      Much of the oil traded worldwide is priced with reference to  "Dated Brent," a daily price assessed by McGraw Hill unit Platts   using the relative values of Brent, Forties, Oseberg and  Ekofisk (BFOE) crude oil blends in the North Sea.      Although these four grades amount to roughly only 1 percent  of world oil production, they have a huge influence over the  price of crude worldwide because Dated Brent is used as the  benchmark for the price of most globally-traded grades of oil.      And because Forties, which is generally the cheapest of the  four grades due to quality differences, usually sets the Dated  Brent price, it is the most influential grade of crude oil in  the BFOE market.      Nexen operates the 210,000 barrels per day capacity Buzzard  oil field, the largest contributor to the Forties oil blend.      Once the takeover is complete, CNOOC will become the  operator, gaining a critical role at the heart of the world oil  pricing system.      The ownership stake in Buzzard will give CNOOC equity  cargoes of Forties, allowing it to actively trade in the  so-called 25-day BFOE forward market that sets the Dated Brent  price.      More valuable than equity cargoes, given the decline in  North Sea supplies and the growing susceptibility of the Brent  market to temporary distortions due to falling liquidity, will  be the critical market intelligence on the supply situation in  the North Sea that CNOOC will obtain.      Foreknowledge of North Sea supply dispositions will give  CNOOC a leg up in its trading operations, not only in the North  Sea, but worldwide, should the company choose to make use of  what it will be learning.      Of course, there is nothing illegal or suspicious here.       This system has long benefited the established oil majors  like Shell and BP who use their knowledge of  North Sea production to trade both physical and financial  products linked to the Dated Brent assessment, including Brent  crude futures.      But it does mark a major step for China's emerging oil  industry and one that is consistent with Beijing's broader  energy sector goals.      Instead of being a pure price taker, China will have some  insight into short term fundamental shifts that affects either  directly or indirectly the cost of the oil the country must  import.            REASON TO WORRY?      A Chinese presence in the heart of the oil price setting  mechanism that governs most of the world's crude trade will be  unsettling to some.      But it would be premature to conclude that Beijing will  start to manipulate oil prices to its advantage once the Nexen  takeover is complete.      For one thing, Nexen's share of Forties production from  Buzzard amounts to roughly four cargoes a month, which is hardly  enough to corner the Brent market.      Moreover the structural weaknesses in Brent make it more  susceptible to upward squeezes. Because of the natural decline  in North Sea production, there are sometimes too many buyers  chasing too few barrels linked to the Dated Brent market.      That makes it easy for a savvy trader to accumulate enough  cargoes from a monthly loading program to trigger a short  squeeze that sends Brent prices temporarily higher.      But China, as a major oil importer, is unlikely to want to  see crude prices pushed up.       Lower prices are more likely to be its goal. But pushing  Brent prices down is a much more challenging proposition because  of the latent upward skew in BFOE.       CNOOC could, perhaps, load up on North Sea cargoes and then  dump them on the market to depress the Dated Brent benchmark.      However the cost of such an operation would likely outweigh  savings achieved elsewhere, particularly if the preparatory  accumulation of other BFOE cargoes initially prompted Brent  prices to spike.      A more likely scenario is CNOOC using its foreknowledge of  maintenance shutdowns to play the Brent crude oil futures market  to its advantage.       Brent futures have already shown a remarkable responsiveness  to short-term movements in the North Sea market and offer a  legal route to higher profits from North Sea production.      But the real advantage that may accrue to CNOOC from the  Nexen acquisition may have more to do with the future of Dated  Brent than the present market structure.      The susceptibility of the benchmark to short-term  distortions is well known and efforts are already underway to  find ways to improve the structure of the market.      Now CNOOC will have a seat at the table as discussions  between the North Sea industry, price reporting agencies and  regulators continue over the future of the benchmark.  
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