The Omicron coronavirus variant kicked oil prices lower late last week and has sapped refining margins, but with crude futures rallying on Nov. 29, the impact could be limited.
Governments worldwide have imposed curbs on travelers to try limit the spread of Omicron, first detected in southern Africa, as scientists race to determine the level of risk.
Oil prices plunged more than 10% on Nov. 26—their largest daily drop since April 2020—but recovered some of those losses on Nov. 29, standing up nearly 5% on the day. Analysts said the Nov. 26 sell-off had been excessive.
Refining margins fell further, increasing the impact of new coronavirus curbs that had already been rolled out in Europe.
On Nov. 26, European diesel barge refining margins touched a three-month low of about $8 a barrel, although oil price volatility kept trading liquidity low.
Jet fuel cargo margins were assessed at about $7.7 a barrel, near a two-and-a-half month low.
"This broad-based correction reflected fears that the Omicron variant would turn into a major headwind to oil demand," bank JP Morgan said, referring to the price move on Nov. 26.
But it said it expected demand recovery from the pandemic to continue even though consumption forecasts had weakened before last week's sell-off.
The volatility raises the stakes for a meeting by OPEC+ set to take place this week when the producer nations will weigh their concerns about demand with pressure from consumer nations facing inflationary pressure from still high oil prices.
KY Lin, spokesman at Taiwan's Formosa Petrochemical Corp. told Reuters further price rises could be limited by investor caution because of Omicron.
Singapore's complex margins, a barometer for Asian refiners' profitability, stood at $2.36 a barrel on Nov. 29 after falling to the lowest since June 30, Refinitiv data showed.
Just a month ago, margins peaked at $8.45 a barrel, the highest since September 2019.
An official at a major South Korean refiner who asked not to be named said he had seen "drastic drops in refining margins" because of the Omicron variant.
Travel curbs could especially hit the recovery of jet fuel prices, which reached a 2021 peak of $13.50 a barrel in mid-October, according to Reuters calculations—broadly in line with their levels in October 2019.
Air travel, however, is a relatively small part of overall oil demand.
"Fundamentally, the announced and enacted international air travel constraints cannot explain such a sharp slump (in crude prices)," Norbert Rucker, head of economics at Julius Baer, said. "Air travel represents around 5% to 7% of global oil demand."
Demand from power generators, which have shifted to using oil as natural gas supplies has shrunk, is also expected to support the overall market.
China, the world's biggest fuel consumer, could also continue to provide support it its rigorous border controls manage to limit the spread of Omicron, said an analyst from a Beijing-based consultancy, who declined to be named due to company policy.
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