Covid Batters Leading Asia Importer
(Bloomberg) -- Indonesia’s Covid-19 crisis is hammering gasoline demand in Southeast Asia’s leading economy, echoing a slump in India earlier this year.
Strict curbs on travel amid a surge in virus cases are taking a toll on consumption, with gasoline and diesel usage plummeting during the initial phase of restrictions from July 3-25. Shipments of gasoline into Asia’s biggest importer of the fuel have sunk almost a quarter, according to Vortexa Ltd.
The drop-off in consumption highlights the threat to the energy market posed by the rapid spread of the delta coronavirus variant, including a flare-up in China. Indonesia has surpassed Brazil and India in daily cases and death counts to become a new global virus center, with confirmed cases jumping and fatality numbers hovering near a record. The hot spots in Asia have weighed on crude oil futures, which retreated for a second straight day on Tuesday.
Indonesia’s gasoline demand from July 3-25 sank 14% from the previous month, according to PT Pertamina Patra Niaga, a unit of the nation’s state-owned energy company. Diesel usage fell about 9%, said Putut Andriatno, corporate secretary at Patra Niaga.
With demand shrinking, imports of gasoline into the archipelago fell more than 23% from previous month to about 190,000 barrels a day in July, Vortexa’s Asia lead analyst Serena Huang said, citing provisional data. Imports last month were the lowest since May 2020, she added. Diesel imports increased.
So far the slump hasn’t affected Asian margins for converting crude into gasoline, with plunging exports from China and better demand from other markets such a now-recovering India have more than compensated for the loss in Indonesian consumption. However, heavy rains in India and China may crimp regional gasoline demand near term, while tighter restrictions in Thailand will also weigh on the recovery, industry consultant FGE said in a note.
Bloomberg Quicktake
“It’s put the country or the nation in a very vulnerable situation.”
Indonesia has now become the new #Covid19 epicenter after a recent streak of 50,000 cases a day. @Griffith_Uni’s Dicky Budiman explains how we got here trib.al/UA6sGLT
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FGE cut its third-quarter gasoline consumption forecast for Indonesia to 520,000 barrels a day from 550,000. Meanwhile, gasoil demand is expected to remain steady at 565,000 barrels a day as industries may continue operations, according to Grayson Lim, a senior oil market analyst at the consultant.
Daily traffic levels across major cities have declined by about a quarter this month from June, according to Apple Mobility data and Bloomberg calculations. The government has extended the mobility restrictions for another week until Aug. 9. The strictest curbs, which include a ban on public gatherings, will remain in place in Jakarta and other major cities across Java.
Crude imports by Indonesia fell to 275,000 barrels a day in July, from 285,000 barrels in June, according to Vortexa. Imports in April had hit a 16-month high. These purchases are typically made almost two months before delivery.
--With assistance from Elizabeth Low and Kevin Dharmawan.
© 2021 Bloomberg L.P.
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