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| North Sea Dated |
North Sea Dated benchmark hits highest since mid-2022 as the Mideast war tightens Atlantic Basin supply. North Sea Dated surged to $112.83/bl on 18 March. North Sea Dated benchmark hits highest since mid-2022 after a $10/bl day-on-day jump.
Europe faces a delayed but widening supply squeeze. Longer shipping times slowed the initial impact versus Asia. However, the disruption now reaches European refiners and traders.
Why North Sea Dated is spiking despite some flows still moving
North Sea Dated benchmark hits highest since mid-2022 because it anchors light sweet crude pricing. The benchmark influences physical grades from Europe, Africa, the Caspian, and the Americas. It also underpins ICE Brent futures pricing.
Some regional barrels still arrive, but the cushion looks thin. Europe still receives some Basrah cargoes that sailed before Hormuz disruptions. Meanwhile, Saudi crude to Europe avoids Hormuz, which limits immediate flow losses.
Backwardation, prompt cargo pressure, and refinery margins set the next move
North Sea Dated benchmark hits highest since mid-2022 even as prompt cargo dynamics briefly capped gains. Traders moved unwanted prompt benchmark barrels at discounts versus later deliveries. Once the market cleared those prompt cargos, Dated resumed its climb.
Refinery economics now shape demand resilience. Wide backwardation makes storage unattractive and punishes inventory builds. Therefore, refiners may cut runs if forward cracks weaken and crude stays elevated.
The Metalnomist Commentary
This price spike signals physical tightness, not only futures momentum. However, refiners will push back if margins compress into May. The next inflection likely comes from run cuts or a stabilization in Gulf shipping risk.

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