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Venezuelan coke demand falls on sanctions uncertainty

  • Market: Petroleum coke
  • 31/01/24

Fresh uncertainty around US sanctions against Venezuelan oil and oil products exports has stifled demand for petroleum coke from the country over the past week.

Earlier this week, the US administration reimposed sanctions on Venezuela's gold exports and warned Caracas that its oil exports may face similar restrictions after April. The warning follows Venezuela's supreme court's decision on 26 January to maintain a ban on opposition candidates running in a presidential election later this year, contrary to the agreement that led to the sanctions pause.

Following the news, interest in Venezuelan coke has fallen as buyers are concerned about their potential liability and securing freight and financing became more difficult, market participants say.

One Indian buyer who had been exploring Venezuelan coke said that its foreign bank partners and even one Indian bank were unwilling to finance the trade. Some Turkish banks also remained sensitive to transactions for Venezuelan supplies.

A number of vessel owners have also put on pause Venezuelan coke shipments following the sanctions news, according to one market participant, while another said that ship owners do not want to go to Venezuela because of load port issues. This could potentially affect previously purchased shipments of Venezuelan coke.

"We are hearing more and more about how Venezuela is not preferred," a trader said. "A month ago, more people were looking into it. Now in the past week, we're hearing more ‘No, we want US Gulf'."

Turkish cement producers that had previously been willing to consider Venezuelan coke in their recent tenders mainly purchased coke from the US and Europe this week. Those that are willing to accept the risks of buying Venezuelan coke are now asking for a bigger discount to US supply, bidding only around $90/t compared with a purchase in mid-January at $93/t on a cfr Turkey basis.

One Venezuelan coke cargo was heard to have closed at less than $110/t cfr on the east coast of India, compared with a cargo of US coke on the west coast at $116/t, where freight costs are lower. Venezuelan coke offers to China were now only around $115/t cfr south China, against bids at $105/t, compared with offers $130/t and bids around $120/t for US-origin coke.

"If you compare the demand for coke from Venezuela late last year and today, you see less buyers accept this origin as we are getting closer to April, when permission for exports expire," another trader said. "And reimposure of sanctions against gold before the date shows how fragile this business is."


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