Daily Times

Home | Archives | Company Financials | Contact Us |  Subscribe | Thursday, May 23, 2013 

Main News
National
Islamabad
Karachi
Lahore
Briefs
Foreign
Editorial
Business
Sport
Entertainment
Advertise
 
Sunday Magazine
 
Boss
 
Wikkid
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Used
Web
 


 
Saturday, April 14, 2012 E-Mail this article to a friend Printer Friendly Version
Share | |

India replaces China as Iran’s top oil client


GENEVA: India has vaulted to the top of the list of Iran’s oil customers, overtaking China, in a first-quarter buying surge ahead of tighter sanctions against Tehran this summer, data published by a leading industry consultant showed.
Direct imports to India from Iran were 433,000 barrels per day (bpd) in the first quarter, compared with 256,000 bpd to China, according to data compiled by Geneva’s Petrologistics and seen by Reuters via an industry source. The Indian import figure was up by around 23 percent from the 351,0000 bpd imported over the same period of 2011 and significantly above the its 2011 average of 326,000 bpd. Iran, like many oil exporters, does not publish its own oil sales data on a timely basis. The Petrologistics figures, however, reinforce indications that India has stepped up imports, while business has slowed between Tehran and Beijing over payment terms.
Iran’s oil exports have fallen this year due to international sanctions aimed at slowing Tehran’s nuclear programme. India is raising its Iranian imports ahead of even tighter sanctions this summer, when payments, insurance and supplies are expected to be more uncertain, traders and analysts have said.
Iran traditionally sells most of its 2.2 million barrels per day of oil exports in Asia, where China, India, Japan and South Korea are the four biggest buyers. Industry sources said Iran’s crude oil exports fell by around 300,000 bpd to 1.9 million bpd in March, with customers in Europe making deep cuts ahead of an EU embargo due to be implemented on July 1.
Customs data showed that China’s imports from Iran for February were down by 40.3 percent from the same period in 2011. This trend was confirmed by the Petrologistics data, which showed that imports were down 39.4 percent in the first quarter versus a year ago.
Short-lived reversal? India, openly disdainful of sanctions to pressure Tehran, has been left off a list of nations given a US waiver from the measures, but the government is privately pushing refiners for substantial cuts in imports from Iran. On a monthly basis, India’s crude purchases from Iran have fallen steadily from 531,000 bpd in January, when it first overtook China as top importer, the data showed, suggesting that purchases of Iranian crude have already peaked. Petrologistics, one of several consultants estimating oil exports by tracking tanker shipments, showed that India imported 404,000 bpd in February and 363,000 bpd in March.
Reuters shipping data showed a similar trend, with India importing about 7 percent less Iranian crude. Many expect lower volumes when new contracts begin in April. The top Indian oil importer in the first quarter was Essar Oil, buying 142,000 bpd compared with 88,000 bpd in the first quarter of 2011, the Petrologistics data showed. reuters

Home | Business

Share | |
SBP keeps discount rate unchanged at 12%
Private sector’s hopes of cut in policy rate diminish
Rise in profit rate to impact banks profit negatively
Medium-Term Fiscal Framework
World IP Day to be celebrated in befitting manner
SECP registers 370 companies in March
Largest-ever cargo vessel in Pak’s history arrives at FAP Terminals at PQA
Govt borrowing from banks rises 56.5% in 8MFY12
Pakistan-India trade
Toyota IMV sales reach 5 million units
Hardships for farmers
Spot rate rises further by Rs 50 per maund
Shaikh meets USAID
NIT sets up kiosk in PICG Conference
HBL renews MS Enterprise sign with InfoTech
PTCL outreach drive at women varsity
Foreigners’ exposure in Pak stocks remains unchanged
KSE closes in the green with gain of 106 pts
ISE increases 48 points
Dollar falls vs rupee
Euro slumps after China growth data disappoints
European shares head for fourth week of losses
Futures off as Spain yields rise, China disappoints
Indian chips drop to 2-week low, Infosys hit by outlook
Asian markets higher after Wall St rally
US consumer prices up 0.3% in March
India replaces China as Iran’s top oil client
Oil slips as China growth lags forecast
Weak China GDP growth no signal for fresh stimulus
Gold dips towards $1,670/oz as China data lifts dollar
Japan govt vows renewed drive to beat deflation
Bangladesh c/a balance improves as export orders pick up
Obama’s ‘green jobs’ have been slow to sprout
 
Daily Times - All Rights Reserved
Site developed and hosted by WorldCALL Internet Solutions


Used books in Pakistan   Web hosting in Pakistan