News
Libya crude supply puts pressure on Nigerian crude
Nigerian crude oil differentials were steady on Tuesday, weighed by increasing supply of similar-quality crude, while Angolan crude for March was mostly sold out. Rising supply of Libyan crude, which has recovered to close to pre-conflict levels, has put pressure on other light, sweet crude such as Nigeria's. A drop in U.S. demand for crude as some Atlantic coast refineries have stopped buying means that more Nigerian cargoes are finding homes in Europe, and trading closer to their loading dates than in the past, one trader said.
“It’s trading steadily,” he said. “This is probably just the market adjusting to a more prompt trading cycle.” Less than half of the 65 Nigerian crude cargoes due to load in March were still reported to be unplaced. Qua Iboe cargoes of Nigeria’s largest stream for March lifting were assessed around dated Brent plus $2.50 to $2.70 a barrel, in line with talks on Monday. More prompt, February cargoes are worth less, traders said.
[ad]
-
News2 days agoDangote Refinery cautions stakeholders on IPO speculation
-
News2 days agoAccount for N129.5bn disbursed for botched 2023 Census, BudgiT tackles NPC
-
Finance2 days agoTotal capital importation rose in Q4 2025, says statistics bureau
-
Economy2 days agoFG begins registration for training of 10m Nigerians on financial literacy
-
Oil and Gas2 days agoDangote Refinery reduces petrol price to N1,200 per litre
-
Finance2 days agoFirstBank empowers SMEs with AI-driven growth strategies, hosts SMEConnect webinar
-
News2 days agoAfreximbank launches inaugural accelerator programme cohort to scale Africa’s Digital trade ecosystem
-
Economy2 days agoWBG working with governments, private sector, regional partners, stakeholders to help solve Middle East war challenges challenges
