Page added on August 12, 2008
BEIJING (Reuters) – Oil traders have long been accustomed to reading the tea leaves for clues to the true state of fuel consumption in China, but even the savviest analysts are being tested this year by a befuddling mix of signals.
An unexpected second month of weak crude oil imports reported on Monday gave fresh vigor to the bears, who read it as a signal that refiners had overestimated demand; bulls are still enraptured by surging diesel and gasoline imports, which they say may continue as industries resume operations after the Olympics.
Both could be wrong.
With major new refiners being started toward the end of this year, China’s crude oil import growth should accelerate but its massive products stockpiling will slow, cutting fuel imports.
Leave a Reply