Qatar Energy: Developments in Red Sea May Affect Gas Shipments

Fitch Ratings said on Wednesday that shipping disruptions and re-routing away from the Red Sea “will maintain the geopolitical premium in the main commodity markets.” (Photo: Reuters)
Fitch Ratings said on Wednesday that shipping disruptions and re-routing away from the Red Sea “will maintain the geopolitical premium in the main commodity markets.” (Photo: Reuters)
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Qatar Energy: Developments in Red Sea May Affect Gas Shipments

Fitch Ratings said on Wednesday that shipping disruptions and re-routing away from the Red Sea “will maintain the geopolitical premium in the main commodity markets.” (Photo: Reuters)
Fitch Ratings said on Wednesday that shipping disruptions and re-routing away from the Red Sea “will maintain the geopolitical premium in the main commodity markets.” (Photo: Reuters)

Qatar Energy announced on Wednesday that the attacks in the Red Sea “may affect” the scheduling of liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipments, in contrast to production, which it assured was “continuing without interruption.”

In a statement, the company said: “While the ongoing developments in the Red Sea area may impact the scheduling of some deliveries as they take alternative routes, LNG shipments from Qatar are being managed with our valued buyers.”

Meanwhile, Fitch Ratings said on Wednesday that shipping disruptions and re-routing away from the Red Sea “will maintain the geopolitical premium in the main commodity markets, including for oil and gas, chemicals, and fertilizers, unless there are wider shipping – or production – disruptions in the region.”

In a statement, the ratings agency said: “Heightened geopolitical risk, including the recent shipping disruptions, will maintain the oil price premium. However, without material disruptions to actual oil production, or a wider escalation of attacks to more vital oil transport routes in the region, we do not expect a strong upside to our USD80/bbl Brent price assumption for 2024, as there is material OPEC+ spare capacity.”

Fitch added that total oil shipments via the Suez Canal, the SUMED pipeline, and the Bab-el-Mandab Strait accounted for about 12% of global oil seaborne trade in the first half of 2023, according to the US Energy Information Administration (EIA).

The agency noted that Houthi attacks have mainly been concentrated in the narrow strait of Bab-el-Mandab.

“Northbound oil shipments via the Suez Canal and the SUMED pipeline are directed to Europe, mainly from Saudi Arabia and Iraq. Southbound flows are primarily Russian oil exports to China and India following the EU sanctions on Russian oil imports,” it stated.

BP, Shell, QatarEnergy, and many shippers have halted transit through the Suez Canal, with some shippers re-routing around Africa, according to the agency, which noted that this “may marginally tighten the oil and gas markets, albeit temporarily, as supply chains need to adjust to the alternative route taking about a fortnight longer.”

However, Fitch does not anticipate any material impact on prices.



Bitcoin, Ether Hit multi-month Lows as Recession Worries Take Hold

A souvenir bitcoin token is seen pictured with a 100 ruble bill in Moscow on July 30, 2024. (Photo by Alexander NEMENOV / AFP)
A souvenir bitcoin token is seen pictured with a 100 ruble bill in Moscow on July 30, 2024. (Photo by Alexander NEMENOV / AFP)
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Bitcoin, Ether Hit multi-month Lows as Recession Worries Take Hold

A souvenir bitcoin token is seen pictured with a 100 ruble bill in Moscow on July 30, 2024. (Photo by Alexander NEMENOV / AFP)
A souvenir bitcoin token is seen pictured with a 100 ruble bill in Moscow on July 30, 2024. (Photo by Alexander NEMENOV / AFP)

Bitcoin and ether plunged on Monday to multi-month lows as worries over a possible US recession in the wake of soft data gripped financial markets and triggered a rush to safe-haven assets.
Crypto markets have gotten a boost this year after the US Securities and Exchange Commission approved an exchange-traded fund to track the spot price of bitcoin and ether.
More recently, however, bitcoin has fallen alongside other assets including global equities in a broad selloff as investors fear a US recession could be on the horizon, with rising geopolitical worries also weighing. It has lost over a third of its value since hitting a record high in March.
"It's a big reminder that bitcoin and crypto in general are risk assets and sit at the pointy end of the risk spectrum," said Tony Sycamore, market analyst at IG.
Bitcoin fell 13% from its close on Sunday to $51,560, heading for its largest one-day fall since November 2022 and its lowest since February. Ether slid 17% to its lowest since mid-January at $2,277.
Sycamore said bitcoin was testing trend channel support at the $54,000/$53,000 area and needed to hold there to "prevent further capitulation towards $48,000."
Shares in crypto-related US stocks listed in Frankfurt fell heavily in early trading on Monday, with Coinbase down over 18%, while those in miners Riot Platforms and Marathon Digital were down 17.7% and 20%, respectively.