SINGAPORE, Dec 28 (Reuters)—Asian refining margins for jet fuel inched higher on Monday, but reimposed travel restrictions in several countries to slow the spread of a highly-infectious coronavirus variant is expected to dent passenger demand recovery.
Refining margins, also known..
as cracks, for jet fuel ticked up $0.05 to $4.76/bbl over Dubai crude during Asian trading hours.The cracks, however, have shed 11% since hitting a more than nine-month high of $5.35/bbl on Dec. 18.
The Philippines on Saturday extended a ban on flights from the United Kingdom by another two weeks to mid-January in a bid to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus variant, while Japan said it would temporarily ban non-resident foreign nationals from entering the country.
Cash differentials for jet fuel <JET-SIN-DIF> were at a discount of $0.10/bbl to Singapore quotes on Monday, compared with a discount of $0.11/bbl in the last trading session on Thursday.
The aviation fuel market is getting some support from air cargo demand, which has firmed in recent weeks as e-commerce deliveries surged during the holiday season, market watchers said.
Meanwhile, airlines are also expected to play a vital role in the mass vaccine rollout in coming days, which is expected to unlock an immediate boost for the sector.
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