Saudi Oil Exports Rose to 7.4 Mln Bpd in December

A Saudi Aramco oil field. (Reuters)
A Saudi Aramco oil field. (Reuters)
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Saudi Oil Exports Rose to 7.4 Mln Bpd in December

A Saudi Aramco oil field. (Reuters)
A Saudi Aramco oil field. (Reuters)

Decisions by OPEC+ are not politicized and are based on market fundamentals, Saudi Arabian Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said on Monday, adding that the alliance of oil producers is sufficiently flexible to adjust policy as needed.

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia’s crude oil exports in December 2022 rose by 157,000 bpd to 7.44 million bpd.

These figures were announced by the International Energy Forum (IEF) on Monday, citing data from the Joint Organizations Data Initiative (JODI).

According to JODI data, Saudi oil product exports rose by 0.222 million bpd to 1.4 million bpd in December.

The demand for petroleum products in Saudi Arabia increased by 0.022 million bpd to 2.399 million bpd.

Global oil demand climbed in December by 1.3 million bpd to a new record high, the data showed.

Oil prices rose on Monday amid optimism over China's demand recovery, concerns that underinvestment will crimp future oil supply and as major producers keep output limits in place.

Brent crude rose 1.1%, to $83.97 a barrel. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude for March was at $77.28 a barrel, up 1.2%. The more active April contract was up 0.5% at $76.90.

The benchmarks settled down $2 a barrel on Friday and closed lower by about 4% last week after the US reported higher crude and gasoline inventories.

“Brent and WTI prices are up slightly this morning after selling off on recent hawkish Fed commentary, following stronger than expected CPI and PPI data released in the US,” Baden Moore, head of commodities research at National Australia Bank, told Reuters.

While last week’s announcement that the US will sell 26 million barrels of crude oil from its Strategic Petroleum Reserves adds some downward pressure to the market, global supply looks to be “flat to down” versus the previous corresponding period after factoring in production cuts by Russia and OPEC+, added Moore.



Turkish Central Bank Governor: Decisive Tight Policy Contains Re-dollarization Risks

Türkiye's Central Bank headquarters is seen in Ankara, Türkiye in this January 24, 2014 file photo. REUTERS/Umit Bektas//File Photo
Türkiye's Central Bank headquarters is seen in Ankara, Türkiye in this January 24, 2014 file photo. REUTERS/Umit Bektas//File Photo
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Turkish Central Bank Governor: Decisive Tight Policy Contains Re-dollarization Risks

Türkiye's Central Bank headquarters is seen in Ankara, Türkiye in this January 24, 2014 file photo. REUTERS/Umit Bektas//File Photo
Türkiye's Central Bank headquarters is seen in Ankara, Türkiye in this January 24, 2014 file photo. REUTERS/Umit Bektas//File Photo

Turkish central bank governor Fatih Karahan said that monetary policy has been proactive and that re-dollarization risks are contained by a decisive tight policy stance, with retail FX demand more limited compared to March 2024.

In the text of a presentation which he made in Washington on Wednesday, Karahan said monetary policy transmission has improved considerably over the last year and that disinflation is continuing, "but risks are alive".

The bank hiked its main policy rate to 46% from 42.5% and lifted the overnight lending rate to 49% last Thursday. The move reversed an easing cycle in response to market turmoil triggered by the arrest of Istanbul's mayor last month, Reuters reported.

The tight monetary stance will be maintained until price stability is achieved via a sustained decline in inflation, Karahan said in the presentation on Wednesday.

The decisiveness regarding tight monetary stance is strengthening the disinflation process, he said.

Karahan said the pass-through effect on inflation of a weaker currency is modest, reflecting improvement in pricing behaviour, while falling oil prices support disinflation, but the global economic outlook is uncertain.

He also said demand has exceeded expectations, driven by goods consumption.

He said currency pass-through is expected to be around 35-40%, considerably lower than that during the summer of 2023, declining amid lower forex-protected KKM account balances, improved inflation expectations and moderating demand.