Asia’s October Base Oils Supply Falls to Three-Month Low

refinery, Singapore, tanker, Malacca Strait
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Summary
  • Supply falls on lower output in southeast Asia, India

  • Lower supply balances out weaker demand, keeping surplus manageable

  • Prospect of recovery in supply and new production could trigger larger surplus even if demand grows

Asia’s base oils supply fell to a three-month low in October as lower output in southeast Asia and India outweighed rising production in South Korea.

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S Korea’s October Base Oils Output Rises
refinery, Singapore, tanker, Malacca Strait

Total supply fell to less than 930,000 tonnes, down from a fourteen-month high of over 975,000 tonnes in September, government data showed.

Asia supply data, government data
Ministry of Energy, METI, KPA and other government data

Supply still rose by 4% and for a third month from year-earlier levels, contrasting with the prolonged output dip in the first half of 2025.

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refinery, Singapore, tanker, Malacca Strait

Lower output and steady demand during that period left Asia’s market fundamentals unusually tight, limiting available supplies and reducing the need for arbitrage shipments to distant markets.

Rising regional output in the second half of the year made strong demand growth critical to absorb additional supply.

The October dip cushioned the impact of a fall in the region’s lube consumption from September, keeping surplus volumes manageable.

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Asia’s October Lube Demand Mixed
refinery, Singapore, tanker, Malacca Strait

The drop in supply mostly reflected temporary production issues, particularly in Indonesia.

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Indonesia Base Oil Trade Flows – Oct 2025 (In Brief)
refinery, Singapore, tanker, Malacca Strait

A resumption of normal production in Indonesia and the recent pick-up in supply from Singapore could boost volumes in the coming months.

The expected start-up of new production capacity in India would further increase supply.

These dynamics could trigger a rise in Asia’s surplus even if regional demand continues to grow.

Supply and prices in Asia and in other regions would need to adjust accordingly in response to these evolving fundamentals.  

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