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Sources say that the high-sulfur marine fuel price in Singapore is depressed due to an oversupply.

Trade sources reported on Wednesday that the prices of high-sulfur marine fuel in Singapore were depressed due to a glut of supplies and a lukewarm market.

Marine fuel traders and sellers have seen their margins eroded at the largest refuelling port for ships in the world. This is because marine fuel must be sold above fuel oil cargo price to make a profit, as it covers logistical costs.

Trade sources said that Singapore bunker prices of HSFO 380cst have been low, and they've held in discounts on cargo quotes despite the bearish fundamentals.

A Singapore-based fuel trader stated that the (HSFO market) is oversupplied by oil of various origins, including Mexico and Iraq.

Several trade sources report that some trades for HSFO cargoes have been done at higher prices than the price of cargoes offered ex-wharf bunkering.

Fuel oil spot differentials were above $6 per metric ton compared with cargo prices this week.

Sources said that ex-wharf marine diesel was sold at a small discount of a single digit to the quoted price. Bunker fuel that is sold ex-wharf means that the seller must transport the fuel to a wharf. A wharf is a dock or terminal where cargo can be loaded and unloaded.

Prices of high-sulfur bunker fuel 380-cst on a delivery basis, including the cost of barging, were stuck in very thin premiums over fuel oil cargo prices.

A bunker supplier that offers HSFO said, "There's an abundance of supplies but the demand is normal and slow."

According to port authority data, the average monthly sales of high-sulfur marine fuel in Singapore have been around 1.6 million tons since 2025.

(source: Reuters)