Dubai crude’s premium slump as sellers pile offers onto TotalEnergies

The logo of French oil and gas company TotalEnergies is seen at a petrol station in Paris, France, March 25, 2026. REUTERS
SINGAPORE, March 27 (Reuters) – Spot premium for Dubai ‌crude slumped by more than half to hit its lowest level in three weeks as more sellers emerged and piled on offers while TotalEnergies remain the sole bidder, according to ​traders and data collated by Reuters.
The premium for the Middle East ​benchmark, that prices millions of barrels of crude that Asia imports, ⁠dropped sharply to about $17 a barrel at the market close on Thursday, ​down more than 60% from $51.20 a barrel in the previous session, underscoring severe ​price volatility due to the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran which has disrupted shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.
Sellers such as Unipec, Vitol, Shell and BP started offering Dubai an hour before ​the trading window started, three of the people said.
“They had more than ​an hour to keep offering (Dubai) down,” one of them said.
“Totsa came up but it wasn’t even ‌trying ⁠to aggressively counter them.”
Totsa, the trading arm of French major TotalEnergies  has been the sole buyer of Middle East crude during the Platts window, snapping up a total of 69 Oman and Murban crude cargoes this month so far, ​or 34.5 million ​barrels, trade data ⁠showed.
The company could not be immediately reached for comment outside office hours. It had previously declined to comment on its ​Dubai trades.
Dubai’s premium spiked to an all-time high of about $65 a ​barrel last ⁠week as the amount of crude available for trading fell after S&P Global Platts excluded three of the five crude grades in anticipation of a prolonged disruption in ⁠shipping ​via the Strait of Hormuz.
The price spike has ​caused Asian refiners to shun spot Middle East crude purchases and instead buy oil from Europe, Africa ​and the Americas.

Reporting by Florence Tan and Siyi Liu; Editing by Michael Perry

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