News 2 days ago

Americas Market Update 6 May 2025

Balboa
Galveston Offshore Lightering Area (GOLA)
Houston
Los Angeles
New York
Zona Comun
HSFO
LSMGO
VLSFO

Bunker prices across the Americas have moved in mixed directions, and deliveries have been suspended in GOLA.

IMAGE: A vessel moving into Galveston Bay from the Gulf of Mexico. Getty Images


Changes on the day to 08.00 CDT (13.00 GMT) today:

  • VLSFO prices up in Houston ($7/mt) and Balboa ($6/mt), and down in Zona Comun ($12/mt), New York ($5/mt) and Los Angeles ($3/mt)
  • LSMGO prices up in Houston ($14/mt), Balboa ($11/mt) and New York ($10/mt), and down in Los Angeles ($10/mt)
  • HSFO prices up in Houston ($10/mt), unchanged in New York and Los Angeles, and down in Balboa ($1/mt)

Houston's LSMGO price has recorded the highest price increase across all fuel grades in the past session. Its discount to New York has narrowed by $4/mt to $61/mt, but this is still about twice as high as the discount of $32/mt two months ago.

Bunker fuel availability remains stable, and weather conditions are normal in Houston.

Bunker deliveries have been suspended in the Galveston Offshore Lightering Area (GOLA) due to high seas and strong wind gusts.

Brent

The front-month ICE Brent contract has gained $1.22/bbl on the day, to trade at $61.71/bbl at 08.00 CDT (13.00 GMT).

Upward pressure:

Oil demand in the US, the world’s largest oil consumer, has shown some resilience in the past week, amid the ongoing US-China tariff saga. This has provided some support to oil prices.

Brent crude’s price felt some upward pressure after commercial US crude oil inventories declined by 2.7 million bbls to touch 440 million bbls for the week ending 25 April, according to data from the US Energy Information Administration (EIA).

A drop in US crude inventories could signal strengthening oil demand and offer some support to Brent’s price, analysts say. Market participants are now eyeing the latest EIA data, due for release tomorrow.

Traders are also closely watching the upcoming US Federal Reserve's Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, where policymakers are expected to discuss potential interest rate cuts in the coming months. A reduction in rates could weaken the US dollar, making dollar-denominated commodities like oil more attractive for holders of other currencies.

“Heading into the FOMC, traders were on a risk diet, not a buffet,” SPI Asset Management managing partner Stephen Innes said.

Downward pressure:

Brent crude’s price gains were capped as markets reacted to a larger-than-expected increase in output from OPEC+ producers.

The Saudi Arabia-led oil producers group surprised the market in April by tripling its planned output hike to 411,000 b/d for May, and on Saturday, it agreed to extend that increase through June.

This is the second month in a row that they plan to expedite the unwinding of their joint 2.2 million b/d output cuts. “That means over 37% of the 2.2mb/d in production gains will have come in the space of two months,” ANZ Bank’s senior commodity strategist Daniel Hynes remarked.

Subsequently, global investment bank Morgan Stanley cut its oil price forecasts for the remainder of the year. The bank now sees ICE Brent to trade around $62.50/bbl in the third and fourth quarters of this year, down by $5/bbl from the previous forecast, Bloomberg reports.

By Gautamee Hazarika and Aparupa Mazumder

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