"It's a sticky situation now. The cost of imported toluene is very high. If I sell off volumes domestically, I will not be able to replenish my stock at a reasonable price," a South China-based trader said.
"The digestion of toluene by the downstream market is so bad that the sales and purchase flow is very slow," he added.
The spread between the import price and domestic price widened in late February, according to Platts data. In January, the CFR China/domestic price spread averaged at $17.09/mt and in February so far, it has averaged at $46.72/mt. During the month, the spread was at its widest on February 16, at $53.81/mt.
As
The FOB
WEAK
The persistently weak domestic market and the holding back of stocks have pushed up inventories in
A trader based in East China has built up an inventory of 8,000 mt on weak downstream demand -- more than twice his usual inventory of 3,000 mt -- on his expectation that crude, and therefore the FOB
According to another trader, small outfits typically hold inventories of 1,000-3,000 mt while larger trading houses may hold anything from 3,000-8,000 mt, with 8,000 mt considered as too high.
"More than 8,000 mt is too high for anyone except Sinopec and CNPC," said the source.
The East China trader, who bought CFR China March cargoes at $1,170-1,180/mt, said he was likely to sell on an FOB
The CFR China marker, for H1 March and H2 March delivery, was assessed at $1,231.50/mt on Monday, up $18/mt from last Friday, while a H1 March delivery cargo was best bid at $1,232/mt, on telegraphic transfer and 90-day credit terms.