By Robert Harvey, Siyi Liu and Georgina McCartney LONDON, May 21 (Reuters) - As prices for physical crude oil hit all-time ...
Global demand for Russian barrels has surged after the United States introduced temporary sanctions waivers for oil already ...
China, the world’s largest importer of energy, has so far weathered the global energy shock brought on by war in the Gulf well compared with some of its Asian neighbors.
Morgan Stanley strategists say that oil prices are lower relative to other supply shocks thanks to two global forces working ...
China relies heavily on crude oil imports from the Middle East but those supplies are mostly cut off due to Iran's blockade ...
China and the U.S., the world's two largest economies, wield great influence over the oil market and are using it to help ...
For more than a decade, leader Xi Jinping has overseen a transformation within the Chinese economy with one aim: making it energy-secure.
China added an estimated 430,000 bpd to crude reserves in April even as imports hit a four-year low, with total stockpiles ...
As the threat of strikes by Iran forces oil tankers destined for Asia to idle in the Persian Gulf, some top Republicans have declared an economic victory against a rival super power. “This is China’s ...
In a quarterly commodities compendium, Macquarie strategists note that China’s oil demand is set for a stronger trajectory in 2026, as robust refining activity and a push toward petrochemical ...
China is no longer only the world’s largest importer of crude oil. It has become the invisible central banker of oil markets.
China continued to build its massive stockpile of crude oil in April, even though imports dropped to the lowest in nearly ...