Saudi Arabia Slashes Price of Flagship Crude to Five-Year Low Ahead of January Deliveries
Saudi Aramco cuts Arab Light crude price to Asia as global supply outpaces demand
Saudi Arabia has reduced the official selling price of its flagship Arab Light crude for Asia to the lowest level in five years, a signal of growing concern over global oil oversupply and softening demand.
The state-owned oil producer set the premium for January loadings at just 60 cents per barrel above the Oman/Dubai benchmark — down sharply from the prior month.
The move marks the deepest discount since January 2021 and reflects a broader effort by Saudi authorities to maintain competitiveness in a market wrestling with ample supply and sluggish demand growth.
The cut surpassed many analysts’ expectations, which had forecast a smaller reduction.
The price adjustment follows a period of rising production by the producer group OPEC+, even as global demand has failed to keep pace.
The timing — just days after OPEC+ confirmed it would pause planned production increases in the first quarter of 2026 — underscores growing unease among oil exporters over weakening consumption, especially in key Asian markets.
By lowering its price for Arab Light, Saudi Arabia appears intent on preserving market share among Asian refiners, who may now find Saudi crude significantly more attractive.
At the same time, the move may intensify price competition across other exporting countries, potentially pressuring global crude benchmarks downward.
Traders and observers will now watch how major buyers respond.
A rise in demand from nations such as China or India could stabilise prices.
If demand remains tepid, however, the discount may amplify downward pressure on oil while raising uncertainty for exporters dependent on higher revenues.