Saudi Aramco said on Sunday evening that Saudi Arabia raised the selling price of its Arab Light crude oil to Asia for the second month in April to $2.50 a barrel, above the average price of Oman and Dubai crude.
The price increase, which is 50 cents a barrel above official selling prices for March, is in line with a Reuters survey as indicators of China’s economic recovery raised expectations of higher fuel demand from the world’s largest oil importer.
China set a modest economic growth target of around 5 percent for this year at its annual People’s Congress. The world’s second-largest economy posted one of its weakest performances in decades last year, when gross domestic product grew just 3 percent.
The market was surprised by Saudi Arabia setting the price of Arab Heavy crude. The official selling price of Arab Heavy crude was $0.75 a barrel, higher than the Oman/Dubai average, up $2.5 a barrel from March.
Elsewhere, top oil exporter Saudi Arabia set the OSP for Arab Light crude to northwest Europe at $1 a barrel above Brent crude in April, 50 cents higher than in March.
Meanwhile, the price of Arab Light Crude to the Mediterranean was raised 30 cents from last month to $0.80 against Brent crude in April.