China fuel prices hit trigger point for a rise
The 22-day moving average price of Brent, Dubai and Cinta on Feb. 15 was 4.3 percent above the level when China last adjusted fuel prices, the data from C1 Energy showed.
An increase or fall in crude benchmarks by more than 4 percent over a 22-working-day period typically triggers a price rise or cut under China's current pricing regime.
However, the government often postpones rises if it is worried about inflationary pressures, and this time may only consider a rise later this month because current fuel demand remains high as hundreds of millions of people are travelling back to their workplaces after the Lunar New Year holiday.
China last adjusted fuel prices on Nov. 16, when it cut them by about 3 percent in response to a decline in crude oil prices.
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