These are Facts:
1.
Refineries cannot solicit, it is
against the law
2.
Before you can “Trade It” you must
“Own It”.
3.
Production Refinery Contracts
(allocations) “First Market Price” do not have “POP Up-Front”.
4.
Surplus Refinery stock does not
exist unless some one fails to perform, the buyer. In that event those that
already have contracts of production will receive first notice of availability
of that stock on those rare occasions and may be permitted to CI/Dip&Pay or
Dip&Pay. This is rare.
5.
Most of the CI/Dip&Pay or
Dip&Pay offers that are circulated on the Net are usually fake and/or
fraudulent from start to finish, I would say around 99.9% of them (“on the
secondary market”). Why waste your time???
6.
On the other hand, if they are not
fake, and you do not know the transactional bank for the deal you will never
see a penny.
7.
There is a difference between
“buying fuel” and “trading fuel” or other petroleum products and/or crude oils.
The proper terms in the Industry for buying fuel is SPOT or Contract of
refinery production “First Market Price”. OR buying and/or trading in the
“Secondary Market”.
8.
Regardless of what market you play
the proper term in the Industry for “Having Buyers” would be you have a buyer
for the product OR if you have a “Trade Desk” then you would have “Exit
Buyers”.
9.
Regardless of #8, you still need to
“Buy It”, therefore when you can bring a buyer forward let it be known: “All
fuels are available.
10.
If you want it CI/Dip & Pay or
Dip & Pay on the Secondary Market, then a real player will bring forth a
POF first to qualify besides CP, etc.
11.
A “Trade Desk” flips to exit buyers,
but must have the funds to “buy it first”, all else is illegal, period.
Therefore, once you own it, then you can sell it.
1.
Are there certain laws you have
to follow in International Global Trading?
The laws are UCP600, Incoterms 2000 and the ICC Paris. You
want to make sure whatever you write and whatever documents you sign these laws
are mentioned. These laws are applicable to all trading countries in the world
including the US. Hence, If your payment instrument is a DLC then you would
want to state in your document that your financial instrument is a Documentary
Letter of Credit defined under UCP600 procedures. This prevents any
misunderstanding of the type of payment being offered. Also, this removes any
grief that could prevail without the UCP600 procedures.
1.
What is a soft offer?
There is no such thing as a "SOFT OFFER". A
"Quote/Offer" is a soft offer. A quote need only to be confirmed.
Once confirmed, a full offer is advised. Once accepted the contract is advised.
1.
Isn't the buyer with the money
the most important thing in securing an oil deal?
Not understanding why the supplier needs to be secured first
can get an intermediary in a lot of trouble.
If an end buyer issues a DLC (Documentary Letter of Credit)
to your account (the controlling intermediary) under the impression that you
have a supplier (because of quotes you received from another intermediary
seller) and the intermediary seller really did not have a supplier then you can
and will be charged on “fraud”. The end buyer went through an expense setting
up the DLC and in return was defrauded by you. It is without say, you are in a
serious situation.
So secure the supplier first, find the buyer second. Once
you get a quote from the person who is in actual possession of the product
(supplier) then seek the buyer.
1.
Is there a difference in a
"RFQ" (Request for Quote) from an End Buyer to a Buyer/Seller as
opposed to a "RFQ" from the Buyer/Seller to the Supplier?
Yes, there is a difference between the End Buyers RFQ and
the Buyer/Sellers RFQ. The RFQ from the End Buyer to the Buyer/Seller is a
request for a quote to buy the product. The RFQ from the Buyer/Seller to the
Supplier is a request for a quote to sell the Supplier’s product. This is why
an intermediary cannot give an "ICPO" to a supplier. The intermediary
is not purchasing the product. Only the person who is taking possession of the
goods is purchasing the product. The intermediary only takes possession of the
Title not the product. The intermediary deals in documents only not the product
itself. The "Quote from the Supplier is the first most important document.
Without a quote from a real supplier you have nothing to start a deal. Supplier
first, buyer 2nd. Here is a small example of a RFQ transaction:... Your
neighbor Joe has a sports car in his driveway for sale and you say to him
("Hey Joe how much do you want for your sports car; I think I know someone
who might want it.) You have just requested for quote from Joe to sell the car,
not to buy. Now you advertise that sports car and a potential buyer asks, how
much for the car?. The buyer is requesting in here for a quote to buy.
1.
If I have secured a supplier
should I ask for a mandateship?
No. A mandate to a supplier is an “agent” who acts on behalf
of a disclosed principal. A mandate is not just given to a person; (as implied
so often). It has to be earned, after a strong relationship has been built from
many years of dealing with a “principle supplier”. The mandate agent can only
act under the instructions of their principle (supplier) who must disclose to
end buyer immediately when the offer is made to an end buyer; and in closing
the deal, the “mandate agent” would be paid a by the supplier is often the end
result. The mandate agent gets no commission from the buyer’s side of the deal.
A mandate agent has to close many deals in order to get any
reasonable commission amount from the supplier. Many intermediaries claim
mandateship because they think being next to the supplier as a mandate agent is
putting them in a great position. This is incorrect. An intermediary in a chain
deal will make a great deal more money than a mandate agent.
The best position in a deal is the “controlling buyer/seller
intermediary”. The buyer/sell must know procedures really well and act in the
best interest of all parities on both sides of the deal.
Forget about becoming a mandate holder of a principal as it
is not a feasible position to hold if you are looking to make the big money.
Learn the proper procedures, rules and policies and become the legally defined
Buyer/seller.
1.
What is really POP?
P.O.P as often seen on the Internet is basically Proof of
Product. Intermediaries cannot give POP if they have never even seen the goods;
and even if one goes to the supplier's country and looks at the goods he is
going to purchase, there is no guarantee that the goods he has seen, will not
be sold to someone else tomorrow. A Proof of Product ('POP') is often requested
by buyers or intermediaries who believe it will give them some guarantee of the
existence of the product and ability of the supplier to deliver. Many POPs
produced are fake. The POP offers no proof at all, because once a POP has been
drafted, it is automatically out of date. The product could have been sold to
another buyer and no longer exists. If an end Buyer were dealing with a
supplier, anything can be suggested especially in matters of POP. But no matter
what the End buyer demands, he will still need to produce the financial
instrument to pay for the goods before a supplier will even consider making any
effort in getting goods ready for delivery. When an end buyer asks a
buyer/seller he needs a POP before financial instrument is in place, he is
really saying : Please tell me who your disclosed principal is so I can
circumvent you. POP really does not really give any proof, but it will give the
opportunity for circumvention.
1.
What does NCND or NCNDA mean?
NCNDA stands for (Non Circumvention, Non Disclosure
Agreement.) This document is not worth the paper it is written on. If you have
your name on this document and get circumvented, do you have hundreds of
thousands of dollars to pay to take this through the international courts? This
is a document that is very hard to enforce. Only a misinformed or unskilled
intermediary/broker would send you a NCNDA.
1.
Is the NCNDA any protection for
an intermediary?
Not even close to protection. The NCND is totally useless
piece of paper unless the product is in your own country. Internationally, this
documents floating around the Internet is impossible to enforce in a court of
law.
1.
What does FPA, IFPA or IMFPA
mean?
IMFPA stands for (Irrevocable Master Fee Protection
Agreement.) The FPA (Fee Protection Agreement) and NCND are usually attached to
each other. FPA / NCND is not the proper way to protect intermediary/broker’s
interests.
Beware if someone claims to be the Mandate, Supplier, End
Buyer while at the same time requesting FPA and NCND. A real mandate never
fears circumvention as he is protected by the one who extended the mandate to
him. A real supplier and a real End Buyer don’t get commissions.
1.
Does the MFPA (Masters Fee
Protection Agreement) enforce payment of commission?
The flawed document MFPA does not protect a commission
payment. There are documents under International Law that can protect your
commission but the MFPA is not one of them.
1.
Please help me understand the
real meaning of LOI and ICPO
LOI: This term is used out on the Internet by inexperienced
traders as a “Letter of Intent” which is incorrect. LOI mean “Letter of
Indemnity.” Inexperience “intermediary seller” who is claiming to be the
supplier will ask for a “Letter of Intent” to purchase goods. You as an
intermediary cannot give a letter of intent to buy goods as your intentions are
not to buy goods but to sell the "Title" of the goods. So your letter
of intent to buy goods would be a lie. Giving a Letter of Intent only means
“Yes I intent to buy the goods but I can change my mind anytime. A letter of
Intent is not a binding contract. The Letter of Intent is a total waste of time
on a worthless piece of paper. An intermediary can only give to the supplier an
“Offer” which is to SELL the Title of the suppliers goods.
ICPO: This term means Irrevocable Corporate Purchase Offer.
This term will not work for the intermediary. An ICPO may work for the end
buyer to the supplier dealing with each other but not for an intermediary. An
intermediary works with different applications. Once again, intermediaries
cannot “irrevocably offer to purchase” the goods when not purchasing. They are
offering to sell the “Title” to the said goods, not purchase and take
possession of goods. If any intermediary offers you an ICPO you know they are
inexperienced or trying to scam you. Only the end buyer can offer such a
document.
The intermediary should first ask the supplier for a “RFQ”
(Request for Quote) not issue a (LOI). The next document is an “Offer” for you
as a “buyer/seller intermediary” to consider from the supplier (“Offer to
Sell”) Not (ICPO). This is all that is needed (Quote, Offer). Not understanding
the proper procedures and documents for an intermediary one of two things will
happen. 1. The deal will collapse, and/or 2. You as an intermediary will be
circumvented. LEARN, STUDY and UNDERSTAND.
Only sometimes these flawed terms and documents will work
between an end buyer and a real supplier. Not very often but sometimes, as
anything can be implied between end buyer and supplier. For the intermediary,
these terms and documents will NEVER work. In the International Trading
business, the only thing needed is a “Quote” “Offer” “Contract” “Payments” and
“Delivery of goods”.
1.
What does BCL mean?
This stands for Bank Comfort Letter. It is a letter provided
by the buyer’s bank to confirm that the buyer has sufficient funds to carry out
the transaction. The intermediary can't give a BCL because intermediaries does
not have the money in their bank account. If you get a BLC from your end buyer
and hand it over to the supplier you have just lost the deal. They will deal
directly with each other and you are out. An intermediary cannot deal with a
BCL. However it may apply to a direct buyer doing business with an end Supplier
on some occasion - but cannot simply be applied when intermediaries such as
Buyer/Seller are involved.
1.
What does RWA mean?
RWA means (Ready Willing and Financially Able.) Like the BCL
the same applies to RWA. (“Look I have the money to buy"- IT DOES NOT MEAN
I WILL BUY) If an intermediary asks for a RWA or BCL from a Buyer and the Buyer
gives a Genuine RWA/BCL, then the intermediary has to continue with the deal
which usually means disclosing the supplier to the buyers side - and here is
your problem -The supplier is disclosed and the buyer changes his mind, then
returns to the supplier at a later time and circumvents everyone in the group.
The buyer just saved himself millions of dollars.
1.
What does EXW stand for and
mean?
EXW stands for "Ex-Work’s and means The buyer pays for
all costs of transport from pickup at the suppliers premises. "e.g. EXW
Clearwater Florida." This means the supplier has sold off the warehouse
floor and at warehouse prices. The buyer makes the arrangements to have it
picked up from the warehouse or another place. (Wherever the supplier says the
product will be. The Supplier or Buyer/seller only have to provide the goods as
per contract at a designated place and nothing more. The contracted driver
gives a pickup receipt to supplier and it is this receipt that allows the
supplier to collect on the DLC . If the buyer/seller or supplier is going to
deliver the goods to the dock, then that's not ex works but FAS (free alongside
ship) The price would now be higher.
1.
What does FAS mean?
FAS means (Free Alongside Ship)) (The supplier pays costs
only to the port of loading) . Loading and shipment are then the responsibility
of the buyer. Also means that once you have the goods on the docks on a
designated date , then you can collect on your DLC the moment the goods are
placed ready near shore Crane tackle for lifting on board ship- If the ship as
ordered by the buyer is late- That's the buyers problem-You get paid once
delivery "FAS" has applied as per Incoterms delivery rules- However
the supplier must clear the goods for export. e.g. "FAS Port Canavera,
Florida". Your custom receipt is presented to your bank to apply
collection on the DLC.
1.
What does a DLC mean in the
international trading business?
A Documentary Letter of Credit (DLC) is a type of financial
instrument used to pay for goods being ordered. The DLC has terms and
conditions applied. The end buyer issues a DLC to supplier and if all
conditions are met the supplier can obtain collection of funds. By default a
DLC becomes an irrevocable Letter of Credit.
1.
What is the best form of DLC?
The best form of DLC issuance are confirmed and irrevocable.
The CIDLC is guaranteed by the issuing bank and not the buyer. In other words
the bank is saying to the supplier "we don't care what the end buyer says,
you the seller have met the condition of the CIDLC, we the bank will guarantee
payment for the goods ordered".
1.
Should I as intermediary accept
a revocable letter of credit from the buyer for payment of goods?
The intermediary should not accept a Revocable Letter of
Credit as it can be modified or even canceled by the buyer without notice to
the intermediary. The payment instrument should be A Pre Advised
"IRREVOCABLE" DLC. The operative word here is "IRREVOCABLE".
Once the conditions of the Pre Advise has been met the DLC becomes active and
the buyer cannot change his mind and cancel the DLC. With a revocable DLC he
can.
1.
You have said in the past that
a TDLC (Transferable Documentary Letter of Credit) can only be transferred
once. If that is the case, then if it is transferred to me from the end buyer.
How do I get to transfer it to the supplier? Please explain the mechanics of
this TDLC.
The end buyer applies for a "TDLC" to pay for
purchased goods to you the “controlling buyer/seller intermediary” as the
beneficiary. The Transferable Letter of Credit is not transferred to your
account, it is issued as a Transferable DLC by the end buyer’s bank to your
bank account. You being the beneficiary of the TDLC can transfer the said
amount of suppliers invoice to the suppliers bank. This is one transfer. The
balance of the TDLC is left in your account as commission for you and the other
intermediary who assisted you on BOTH SIDES. Once it is transferred to the suppliers
bank it cannot be transferred again. One transfer only.
Note: The transferable DLC may be transferred to more than
one supplier but can only be transferred once. Hence, one supplier gets xx% of
the TDLC and another supplier gets yy% of the same TDLC but once transferred to
the suppliers it cannot be transferred again.
1.
What does Swift MT 760 mean?
SWIFT (Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial
Telecommunication) MT (Message Type) and the numbers indicates one of the many
standardized message formats which comprise the SWIFT messaging system. These
types of payment are internal bank applications for transferring money-
Intermediaries cannot use such applications. When a bank issues an MT 760 it
practically issues a payment guarantee, on behalf of a customer, typically
having first blocked the same amount of funds in the customer's account.
Impossible incorrect flawed applications. Intermediaries can only use Non
cumulative revolving UCP600 Bank issued Irrevocable Documentary Letter of
Credits (PA IDLC) when attempting to close a deal.
1.
What does this mean? Branches
of a bank in different countries are considered to be separate banks. Am I to
understand that branches of a bank in the same country are considered to be the
same bank?
Branches of particular banks are able to perform different
functions as perceived by the UCP600 provided they are based in different
countries. If a bank in London England issues a Letter of Credit, its branch in
Manchester England cannot confirm it as they are both in the same county and
therefore are considered to be the same bank. If the same bank in London
England issues a letter of credit and its office in Dubai were requested to add
its confirmation then this is acceptable under UCP600 Article 3 (but not
necessarily acceptable to the beneficiary) as the branches are in different
countries.
1.
My buyer wants a sample first
before he enters into agreement with me. Should I send it to him?. This could
be very expensive and then he might change his mind.
The buyer is being very inventive. (suppliers hate this).
The buyer may be looking to reject the goods even if they perfectly match the
shipped goods. This can easily happen. Any sample given overrides any specs in
the contracts. In other words, if the goods arrive different even just a little
from the sample, the goods can be rejected at port. A buyer could create this
problem to get the goods at a lower price. Buyers know what they want. SGS does
the analytical inspection of the goods and advises exactly what is being
shipped. The safest way to go is No Samples.
1.
I have been sent an out dated
SGS certificate from a company to prove to me that they have done business in
the oil industry before. Is there a way I can check to see if this certificate
is real?
To authenticate a SGS certificate you may contact SGS by
telephone (+41 22 739 91 11) or fax them the certificate to
authenticate at (+41 22 729 98 86). They also will offer to validate a
certificate online . It is impossible to forge a SGS certificate as the
certificate number can be checked with just a phone call. You can also email
them through their Information Request Page at http://www.sgs.com/solution_finder/information_request.htm
1.
I was told that the “Bank
Performance Guarantee” from the supplier was what activated the Letter of
Credit from the buyer. Is this correct? Also when the Letter of Credit is
activated does this mean it has turned into actual money?
NO, a Performance Guarantee does not activate the L/C and
NO, activation of the L/C does not mean money.
A Bank Performance Guarantee is issued in the form of a
Stand by Letter of Credit defined by and subject to the rules of ISP98
(International Standby Practice) by the suppliers bank as a guarantee of
delivery to the buyers bank. This is a complete separate entity to the Pre
Advised Documentary Letter of Credit.
The Pre Advised Transferable Documentary Letter of Credit is
issued by a prime Top World Bank Per UCP600 banking laws by the buyer for
purchase of goods and is activated only when the Pre Advise conditions are met.
The conditions in the Pre Advise L/C is not the Performance Guarantee.
Activation of a letter of credit is not money in the
suppliers bank account. Activation of the L/C means the buyer who issued the
L/C cannot change his mind and void the Letter of Credit unless fraud is
proven. The active Letter of Credit turns into money only when the delivery
documents are presented to the bank and the end buyer.
The L/C is always issued first by the buyer and the Bank
Performance Guarantee is issued by the supplier second.
Note: Sometimes instead of a Bank Guarantee the supplier
offers a “LDD” (Late Delivery Discount) applied as a credit of XX% to favor of
the end buyer on the Sellers invoice if delivery fails to be made on time. The
buyer sometimes sees the "LDD" as the favorable choice of delivery
guarantee as the % value offered on the LDD is higher than the % value of the
SLC.
1.
The supplier offered us a 2%
Performance Bond for the guarantee of the delivery of the good. My question is:
What is the difference between a Performance Bond and a Performance Guarantee?
The Performance Bond (PB) is a guarantee that follows the
goods to the destination port in where if the goods can be rejected for good
reason, then applying on the collection of P.B supported by a B.G. Both the
Performance Guarantee and the Performance bond are "based" on performance
yet both are different types of performance assurance.
A Performance Bond is for a deal that works for the supplier
in possession of goods and an end buyer taking possession of goods. The
delivery of title documents cannot be secured so an intermediary is not to
enter in such deals.
A Performance Guarantee is a guarantee given by the seller’s
bank to the buyers bank in the form of an unconditional Stand-By letter of
Credit. If the delivery fails and the delivery documents are not presented to
the bank on the date specified in the contract, the bank just automatically
pays buyer bank the Performance Guarantee unconditionally, No questions asked.
So the Intermediary must ask the seller to issue a
Performance Guarantee (PG) of 2% (Not a Performance Bond) of the total cost as
defined in contract, issued as unconditional as per Stand-by Letter of Credit
procedures defined under UCP600 banking rules, issued within 3 days of buyers
L/C being transferred.
1.
If the end buyer collects on
the "2% PG" (Performance Guarantee) for non-delivery of goods, how
does the intermediary who is controlling the deal gets compensated for his time
and effort?
You as the buyer/seller (controlling intermediary) offer to
the end buyer a lesser value to what you obtained from the supplier or you
offer no "P.G." to the end buyer even though you still get the
"P.G." from the supplier.
1.
Does the supplier or the end
buyer order the vessel to deliver the purchased goods?
In a FOB deal the End Buyer order/charters the vessel. In a
CIF or CFR deal the Supplier secures the vessel. Even though the vessel is
ordered by the supplier, the buyer is still responsible for the cost of vessel
which is on the supplier’s invoice.
1.
If one sees the "CIF
ASWP" why would you suspect it to be a scam?
CIF ASWP stands for Cost Insurance and Freight to Any Safe
World Port. This is a flawed term which does NOT exist in the real market. The
CIF part of the term is correct, the ASWP is wrong. There is a simple logic
behind this. The shipment cost cannot be the same to ANY World’s Port! For
example the CIF (Cost Insurance and Freight) price to ship sugar from Brazil to
China would be double compared to if it was shipped to South Africa. This could
make it over half a million dollars price difference. No buyer would be willing
to pay extra just to get an “easily” quoted CIF ASWP price.
1.
What does NNPC/JVC stand for
and mean?
NNPC/JVC stands for- Nigeria National Petroleum Company /
Joint Venture Company. NNPC/JVC is often seen on a fraudulent Sales and
Purchase Agreement asking for banking information. The NNPC is in joint venture
with many companies like Shell, Mobil, Elf, Chevron, Texaco, Agif which means
they are doing business with these companies. The NNPC are not in partnership
with these companies. The NNPC cannot offer a sales and purchase agreement to
any intermediary, company or anyone implying that the companies they are doing
business with is part of a sales and purchase agreement. Anyone offering such a
sales and purchase agreement does not have oil or even access to it.
If the NNPC and Shell or Mobil or any other company are
involved in any sales and purchase agreement with a principal buyer (which is
very doubtful) it has to be specifically stated on the sales and purchase
agreement. No Sales and Purchase Agreement can be generic as being offered on
the Internet.
1.
How can I figure out the
distance by water from the Bonny Port in Nigeria to the Port in the Bahamas?
Check out www.distances.com
Bottom Line…. It is a fact that there is so much misinformed
information going on out there in the international oil trading world that it
is hard to know where to begin.
There are three important pieces of information we think one
needs to be particularly aware of.
- Shell
Screen London • NNPC (Nigerian National Petroleum Company) • Lloyds of
London
1.
Shell Screen London…There is no such
thing. There is no website, there is no company. The "Shell Screen"
is a complete lie. Regardless of claims, there is no "Shell Screen
Company" in London run by Lloyds of London or the NNPC, (Nigerian National
Petroleum Company) or anyone else. The “Shell Screen” does not exist, it is a
complete lie
2.
Lloyds of London… Many misunderstand
what Lloyds of London really is. Lloyd's is the world's leading British
insurance market place providing specialist insurance services (underwriters)
to high risk businesses in over 200* countries and territories. Over 300 years
ago Lloyd’s started out in Edward Lloyd’s Coffee House in the city of London,
UK, ( http://www.solarnavigator.net/lloyds_of_london.htm ) as a place where
people with exposure to risks, could meet people with capital who, for a price,
would agree to insure them. The Society of Lloyds was incorporated by 1871. By
the turn of the century the traditional club of marine underwriters had become
an international market place for high insurance risks of almost every type. We
recommend that you visit the Lloyds web site www.lloyds.com which will provide
you with more information of the many services and the Underwriters, that
Lloyd’s of London provide today. Posting or tracking vessels is not one of
their services. Many companies will track vessel for a fee, one of them is
http://www.lloydsmiu.com which has no connection with Lloyds of London.
http://www.hapag-lloyd.com/en/home.html is a large liner shipping company with
over 130 ships, again no connection with the famous Lloyds’ of London.
3.
NNPC (Nigerian National Petroleum
Company) (Government owned and operated) NNPC was established in April 1, 1977.
The NNPC by law MANAGES the joint venture between the Nigerian federal
government and a number of foreign multinational corporations, which include
Royal Dutch Shell, ExxonMobil, Agip, Total, Fina, Elf, Chevron, and Texaco.
Through collaboration with these companies, the Nigerian
government conducts petroleum exploration and development. The NNPC has sole
responsibility for upstream (searching for and the recovery and production of
crude oil) and downstream (the refining of crude oil, the selling and
distribution of natural gas and products derived from crude oil) developments,
and is also in control of regulating and supervising the oil industry on behalf
of the Nigerian Government.
According to the Nigerian constitution, all minerals, gas,
and oil the country possesses are legally the property of the Nigerian federal
government which is managed by the NNPC. In 1988 the NNPC was commercialized
into 12 strategic business units, covering the entire oil industry operations,
which is, exploration and production, gas development, refining, distribution,
petrochemicals, engineering, and commercial investments. In addition to the 12
business units managed by the NNPC, the oil industry is also regulated by the
Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR).
The DPR ensures compliance with industry regulations;
processes applications for licenses, leases and permits, establishes and
enforces environmental regulations. The DPR, and NAPIMS (National Petroleum
Investment Management Services) one of the 12 strategic business units managed
by NNPC, plays a very crucial role in the day to day activities throughout the
industry. Requirements for Buying/Selling Marketing Crude Oil. Those who wish
to buy and sell Nigerian crude oil must demonstrate their commitment to the oil
industry through allocation of adequate resources of capital, equipment and
manpower. Those who are eligible to apply for an allocation must be an upstream
investor who has acquired an oil prospecting license and has completed a
minimum amount of work on the concession.
Only local refineries, international refineries and
international recognized oil & gas traders may apply for an OPL (Oil
Prospecting License.) (OPL is a license granted over an area to a company by
the Government for the company to conduct exploration activities. Once a
commercial quantity of petroleum or gas is located in an OPL (Oil Prospecting
License), an OML (Oil Mining Lease) may be granted to the holder of the OPL to
carry out Production activities only in the area covered by the OPL license.
Usually, the area covered by a single OML is only a portion of the preexisting
OPL.
Here’s how it works. The players are:
The Nigerian Government, (who owns all the oil in Nigeria)
NNPC (Nigerian National Petroleum Company) negotiates the signature bonuses
with the bidders NPDC (Nigerian Petroleum Development Company) an
E&P(Exploration and Production) Unit also partnership with Agip (a retail
gas and diesel Co.) DPR (Department of Petroleum Resources) sets the rules and
issues the licenses.
The Nigerian Government offers block (an assigned area for
exploration) to be bid upon by:
- An
end user who owns a refinery and a sales outlet. • A world recognized oil
trader with proof of handling large volume of crude oil in the last three
years. • Applicants must have a minimum turnover of no less than $100
million and a net worth of no less than $40 million • The applicant must
invest in opportunities that are in the oil industry or gas sector. •
Applicants are required to post a $1 million performance guarantee through
a first class Nigerian bank in addition to the regular crude oil contract
provisions.
Each block is assigned an Oil Prospecting License (OPL)
number Ex: “OPL 250” “OPL 242” “OPL 244” which participating oil companies can
bid upon.
If awarded that block and after oil is located an Oil Mining
Lease (OML) is granted to the holder of the OPL to carry out production
activities.
High bidder is not always awarded the winning choice block.
Most importantly, and for all those of you who don’t know,
NNPC does not sell crude oil. They only manage the sales of Nigerian oil.
Unscrupulous individuals claiming to be officials or agents, directors, CEO of
oil companies have extorted huge sums of money from foreigners for fraudulent
crude oil allocation papers. By the same token, there is nothing like a
Presidential, Task Force , Ministerial, Diplomatic, International Agents or any
other form of special or privileged allocation, which can be peddled by
hawkers, companies or anyone. The NNPC has not given any mandate to anyone
person or persons to negotiate the sale of Nigerian Crude oil on its behalf.
The real allocations of oil products are quickly marketed
and contracted out to fulfill existing real demand among major oil companies
(Shell, ExxonMobil, Chevron,, Texaco), this demand of the major oil companies
outweighs the oil supply of Nigeria.
We warn you one more time against having any dealings with
anyone claiming to have access to special allocation. If you are contacted with
such an offer you can verify it directly with the NNPC Group General Manager
at +234 9 234 8200.
There is no official or easy entry to this market on a
secondary level. In fact, it is astronomically impossible to enter this market
as a non major firm on any level….. One can safely regard any BLCO offer as a
pure and simple myth.
To close….An intermediary needs to learn the proper
procedures or will end up suffering consequences.
The Reasons:
1.
If the proper procedures are not
followed the deal will never close. Or even get to the acceptance of the offer
from the end buyer. 2. If an intermediary use the flawed LOI/ BCL/ ICPO/ POP/
MPA/ NCND/ PB/ ASWP documents, they are an untrained trader that has been
misguided by another unskilled and untrained trader.
Note: A trader using the above flawed ambiguous procedures
is wasting time on deals that simply cannot be closed. The worst part about
this is traders do not understand why it is not working and never gets enough
training to correct their mistakes.
Conclusion:
Every industry and every country has their own standards and
different rules and regulations that govern trading in their jurisdiction.
Buyers, Sellers, Brokers, Intermediaries all need to educate themselves in the
proper legal procedures for their industry and location.
In any business though, knowledge is power. In the
international trading business, knowledge is survival. Not knowing the proper
procedures, you will not survive and you will never close a deal.
We look forward to doing business with you and to continue
being your resource for deals, capital, relationships and advice. Your feedback
as always is greatly appreciated.
Thanks much for your consideration.
NNPC releases list of 36 beneficiaries
Meanwhile the provisional names of the 36 companies that
were awarded contracts to lift crude oil by the federal government through the
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) from June 1, 2014 to May 31,
2015 have been revealed.
Although the list is not final as more companies are
expected to make the final list, it signals a paradigm shift to indigenous
companies as against previous preference for foreign companies, according to
the NNPC.
The list comprises 21 indigenous companies; eight
international oil traders; two foreign refineries; two subsidiaries of the NNPC
and three countries, represented by their state-owned National Oil Companies
(NOCs).
According to the document, 21 indigenous companies were
awarded contracts to lift a total of 630,000 barrels per day of crude oil
during the one-year period, representing 57 per cent of the 1,179,000 barrels
per day awarded to the 38 beneficiaries.
The list also showed that eight international oil traders
got an allocation of 240,000 barrels per day, representing 20.5 per cent of the
whole allocations, while two foreign refineries got 60,000 barrels per day, or
5.1 per cent of the allocations.
Two subsidiaries of the NNPC were awarded contracts to lift
90,000 barrels per day, which translates to 7.7 per cent, while three
countries, represented by their NOCs also got 90,000barrels per day.
A breakdown of the allocations showed that each of the 21
indigenous traders got an allocation of 30,000 barrels per day.
These companies include A-Z Petroleum Products Limited; Hyde
Energy Nigeria Limited; DK Global Energy Resources Limited; Aiteo Energy
Resources,; Avidor Oil and Gas Company Limited; Azenith Energy Resource
Limited; Barbados Oil and Gas Services Limited; Century Energy Services Limited
and Crudex International Limited.
Other beneficiaries include Eterna Plc; Bono Energy;
Taleveras Limited; Mezcor SA; Sahara Energy Resources Limited; Tridax Energy SA
and Tempo Energy SA.
The rest include Ontario Trading SA; Voyage Oil & Gas
Limited; Elektron Petroleum Energy and Mining Limited; Ibeto Petrochemical
Industries Limited and Emo Oil and Petrochemical Company. Also included in the
list are eight international oil traders, which got an allocation of 30,000
barrels per day of crude oil each.
They include Addax Energy SA; Elan Oil Limited; Mercuria
Energy Trading SA; Springfield Ashburton Limited; Petro/Ietnam Oil Corporation
(PV Oil); Sullum Voe; Vitol SA and Delaney. Two foreign refineries -Fujairah
Refinery Limited and PTT Public Company Limited received an allocation of
30,000 barrels per day each while two subsidiaries of the NNPC - Duke Oil and
Calson were awarded 30,000 barrels per day each.
The NNPC also entered into bilateral commitments with the
Republic of Malawi; SINOPEC of China and Indian Oil Corporation Limited, with
each of these entities receiving 30,000 barrels per day.
NNPC Allocation Verifiaction
What is a POP? What is in a POP? What do we verify? included in a standard POP is:
Proof of product/Cargo Ref # Export permit license # Bulk approved MPR # Quantity (per quarter) Sometimes the stem number I call the above a partial POP because these numbers are not coming as an allocation or ATS letter on NNPC letterhead – they are listed in the contract.
When you get the full letter you can often disqualify it right off just by looking closely for evidence of tampering but a partial POP requires a visit into the NNPC.
Off-OPEC POPs are only verifiable at the NNPC offices in Abuja after the vessel is loaded. OPEC allocations are verifiable anywhere in the world via the Shell Screen.
Now here is the sad truth – our off-OPEC buyers are constantly asking for ATS, allocation letters and POP. The latter two of these POP and Allocation documentation are not verifiable anywhere in the world with any degree of consistency.
We have found the only pathway to verify a NNPC Approved Fiduciary’s ATS letter. That is at the offshore loading platform, the Bonny Terminal. AS OF MID JANUARY 2014 THE TERMINAL IS NO LONGER ALLOWING VISITORS, CITING TERRORIST THREATS
This is a secure facility and requires an appointment set by the seller. The NNPC staff at the terminal do not want to verify unless the buyer has a signed contract. This is a secure facility, guarded by the military and no one can just visit. You have to go with the seller’s rep, have a contract signed, a passport and an introduction letter from the buyer to get in the door and get the verification done.
There are three types of sellers that are selling off-OPEC Nigerian crude. Registered lifters, Allotment holders and NNPC Approved Fiduciaries. To get an allotment requires the seller to bring in the buyers POF, so almost all Allotment holders product is already sold. Allotment holders get an allocation award letter.
There is no trustworthy way to verify an allocation. (Nov 2012) Not in London or Abuja. I will give you several reasons why. We took our allocation information in from six sellers to the offices (5th floor block B) towers in Abuja. Two of our sellers were already delivering oil to buyers. One of those was direct from the NNPC account issued out of the port Harcourt NNPC offices thru the terminal managed by Shell Oil. They told us that none of the documents verified BUT that they would be happy to introduce us to a real seller that they know of.
You can not even verify allocations at the main office because money talks louder than honesty.
Now there are some things you need to know about off-OPEC allocations (resellers= Allotment Holders) They are issued direct by the NNPC only. They list the amount of oil and the source from which that oil is lifted from and they also list the size of the source. Allotment holders have a fixed amount of oil allotted usually for a year on a quarterly allotment. The largest allotment I have seen was for 16 million barrels per quarter. Once their allotment is sold they can not extend or increase their allotment without permission. We have had an allotment holder and registered lifter come to us to get more BLCO because the NNPC would not extend their allotment.
Official documents are printed on the NNPC letterhead (it has an NNPC watermark under the typing) and they are time sensitive and cost money. So a seller (allottee) might pay for one after getting the first contract. If he closes that sale then the amount available is no longer the amount listed because some of that allotment has then been sold. This means that the seller may no longer have the right to sell because he has sold all of his allotment and even though the document may say he has 16M bbls per quarter it may be sold already. A seller is not going to go into the NNPC and pay for an allotment letter every time a potential buyer shows up. So he will give out the old letter. Even so, it is not verifiable as I mentioned before.
NNPC Approved Fiduciaries do not get an allotment, they get an authority to sell document (ATS Letter) and are selling out of the bulk equity account, so they can sell 10 Million barrels per month if they can get fit into the lifting schedule. What they need is the buyers POF and they can get it done.
We are mandates for three Fiduciaries selling out of the giant source at + 488 million barrels direct from the NNPC bulk equity account at the moment.
All buyers should expect to be able to verify the Fiduciaries ATS letter to ensure the seller had the legal right to sell. We have done this a few times and when a buyer comes to the Bonny Terminal he quickly finds out that the seller is real and that there are people at the terminal that know the seller which helps the Buyer to be able to trust the purchase contract since they check that also. THIS IS NO LONGER POSSIBLE There is a new procedure our sellers are using to sell oil and totally verify the product. Please see the registration link below.
Now, once a contract is signed and a banking instrument is in place there are lifting schedule (programing) documents and other documents that are created that are easily verified just as though the sale was an OPEC sale.
What is a POP? What is in a POP? What do we verify? included in a standard POP is:
Proof of product/Cargo Ref # Export permit license # Bulk approved MPR # Quantity (per quarter) Sometimes the stem number I call the above a partial POP because these numbers are not coming as an allocation or ATS letter on NNPC letterhead – they are listed in the contract.
When you get the full letter you can often disqualify it right off just by looking closely for evidence of tampering but a partial POP requires a visit into the NNPC.
Off-OPEC POPs are only verifiable at the NNPC offices in Abuja after the vessel is loaded. OPEC allocations are verifiable anywhere in the world via the Shell Screen.
Now here is the sad truth – our off-OPEC buyers are constantly asking for ATS, allocation letters and POP. The latter two of these POP and Allocation documentation are not verifiable anywhere in the world with any degree of consistency.
We have found the only pathway to verify a NNPC Approved Fiduciary’s ATS letter. That is at the offshore loading platform, the Bonny Terminal. AS OF MID JANUARY 2014 THE TERMINAL IS NO LONGER ALLOWING VISITORS, CITING TERRORIST THREATS
This is a secure facility and requires an appointment set by the seller. The NNPC staff at the terminal do not want to verify unless the buyer has a signed contract. This is a secure facility, guarded by the military and no one can just visit. You have to go with the seller’s rep, have a contract signed, a passport and an introduction letter from the buyer to get in the door and get the verification done.
There are three types of sellers that are selling off-OPEC Nigerian crude. Registered lifters, Allotment holders and NNPC Approved Fiduciaries. To get an allotment requires the seller to bring in the buyers POF, so almost all Allotment holders product is already sold. Allotment holders get an allocation award letter.
There is no trustworthy way to verify an allocation. (Nov 2012) Not in London or Abuja. I will give you several reasons why. We took our allocation information in from six sellers to the offices (5th floor block B) towers in Abuja. Two of our sellers were already delivering oil to buyers. One of those was direct from the NNPC account issued out of the port Harcourt NNPC offices thru the terminal managed by Shell Oil. They told us that none of the documents verified BUT that they would be happy to introduce us to a real seller that they know of.
You can not even verify allocations at the main office because money talks louder than honesty.
Now there are some things you need to know about off-OPEC allocations (resellers= Allotment Holders) They are issued direct by the NNPC only. They list the amount of oil and the source from which that oil is lifted from and they also list the size of the source. Allotment holders have a fixed amount of oil allotted usually for a year on a quarterly allotment. The largest allotment I have seen was for 16 million barrels per quarter. Once their allotment is sold they can not extend or increase their allotment without permission. We have had an allotment holder and registered lifter come to us to get more BLCO because the NNPC would not extend their allotment.
Official documents are printed on the NNPC letterhead (it has an NNPC watermark under the typing) and they are time sensitive and cost money. So a seller (allottee) might pay for one after getting the first contract. If he closes that sale then the amount available is no longer the amount listed because some of that allotment has then been sold. This means that the seller may no longer have the right to sell because he has sold all of his allotment and even though the document may say he has 16M bbls per quarter it may be sold already. A seller is not going to go into the NNPC and pay for an allotment letter every time a potential buyer shows up. So he will give out the old letter. Even so, it is not verifiable as I mentioned before.
NNPC Approved Fiduciaries do not get an allotment, they get an authority to sell document (ATS Letter) and are selling out of the bulk equity account, so they can sell 10 Million barrels per month if they can get fit into the lifting schedule. What they need is the buyers POF and they can get it done.
We are mandates for three Fiduciaries selling out of the giant source at + 488 million barrels direct from the NNPC bulk equity account at the moment.
All buyers should expect to be able to verify the Fiduciaries ATS letter to ensure the seller had the legal right to sell. We have done this a few times and when a buyer comes to the Bonny Terminal he quickly finds out that the seller is real and that there are people at the terminal that know the seller which helps the Buyer to be able to trust the purchase contract since they check that also. THIS IS NO LONGER POSSIBLE There is a new procedure our sellers are using to sell oil and totally verify the product. Please see the registration link below.
Now, once a contract is signed and a banking instrument is in place there are lifting schedule (programing) documents and other documents that are created that are easily verified just as though the sale was an OPEC sale.
Seller Confirmed RIC
Seller notes:
We are partnered with a gentleman who's family has been in
the shipping , buying, selling coal , iron ore , and various refined oil
products.. We have connections with about 27 different refineries throughout
the world and can have fuel for you pretty much any safe port in this world ...
We also are one of the few with a department of defense license , we fuel couple
US naval basis and due to that we are able to supply great discounts in the
secondary market ...
1.Terms are non-negotiable with seller:
Ref: Refinery 3b2c
Offer: Jp54 Rolling Spot, First lift FOB Rotterdam 1M bbl,
Contract FOB Rotterdam 1 to 10 M bbl
Price: Minus 7/5 off NWE Platts (3 day average)
Note: Discharge into Buyer’s Tanks ONLY at Rotterdam - Activated
bar coded TSR required
Seller pays commissions
Procedures:
- Buyer
issues full company details and Buyer’s banking coordinates to the Seller either
as ICPO or via email from Seller’s secured corporate email (NO gmail addresses!) to Buyer’s corporate email.
- Seller
issues Conditional Commercial Invoice & IMPFA to Buyer.
- Buyer
is required to duly sign, seal, date and return the Conditional Commercial
Invoice to the Seller within the expiration time shown on the CI, along
with ALL of the following documents:
- Buyers
nominated verified Tank Storage Agreement (TSA) and full contact details
of Tank Farm
- Buyer’s
activated & bar coded Tank Storage Receipt (TSR) including Tank
Numbers
- Buyer’s
Tank Farm Storage Authorisation Letter to Inject (ATI)
- Following
Seller’s Refinery Suppliers verification of the Buyer’s Shore Tank Storage
Facilities, the Buyer will be provided by the Seller WITHIN A MAXIMUM OF
(12) TWELVE BUSINESS HOURS, the Seller’s Refinery Suppliers verifiable
documents including and not limited to the following POP:
- Pipeline
Injection Schedule
- Dip
Test Authorisation (DTA)
- SGS
Inspection Report (SGS)
- Country
of Certificate of Origin
- Business
Registration
- Other
relevant supporting Refinery Supplier POP documents.
- After
verification by the Seller’s Refinery Supplier of the Buyer’s Tank Storage
facility, (within 8-12 hours), after the above is provided to the Buyer
from the Seller’s Refinery Supplier and upon the Buyer’s verification and
acceptance of the Seller’s Refinery Suppliers POP, the fuel is transported
to the approved and verified Storage Tanks of the Buyer and/or Storage
Tanks under Buyer’s control..
- If
the Buyer chooses to do so, the Buyer must order their dip test analysis
report (DTAR) on the fuel within (24) Twenty Four hours of delivery to
Buyer’s confirmed storage facility.
- Upon
confirmation of successful dip test results or Buyer acceptance of POP and
Quality and Quantity of fuel, the Buyer issues payment by (MT103/TT) to
the Seller’s nominated bank account within (8-12) Eight to Twelve hours of
confirmation as agreed by the parties per instruction in the Commercial
Invoice.
- Upon
confirmation of Act of Transfer in Buyer’s name (and/or their
Nominees/Assign’s Name), Seller sends to the Buyer, Title of Ownership
certificate to be followed by all export documentation in addition to the
Authority to Sell (ATS).
Intermediaries are paid as per the signed fee agreements
under the IMPFA.
Steps (2) Two to (8) Eight are repeated for all additional
lifts, as required by the Buyer as per the Buyer’s logistics.
2.) We can get D6 our terms for CI Dip N Pay would require:
Buyer would need a US Bank (Except Chase) or Canadian banks
such as Scotia or Toronto Dominion can be possible.
NO blocked funds just a DLC would have to be posted to our
Wells Fargo account directly linked to the refinery
FOB Port of Origin is where Dip Test will be done. (Once test is done and bank confirms right fuel in tanker then payment made)
The quantities we like to start new clients off with would be about 50k barrels of Jet A 1 and 100,000 MT for the D2 (In this case D6) and Mazut. (We can RAMP UP quickly to meet buyers needs)
FOB Port of Origin is where Dip Test will be done. (Once test is done and bank confirms right fuel in tanker then payment made)
The quantities we like to start new clients off with would be about 50k barrels of Jet A 1 and 100,000 MT for the D2 (In this case D6) and Mazut. (We can RAMP UP quickly to meet buyers needs)
Our pricing for Diesel products will be based on a 3 days
average while Jet A1 is weekly.
Please emphasize that we are direct seller that is refinery
direct with no product in storage there is no middle man going to the seller if
this buyer can confirm I will get information forwarded for review. Then from
there set up conference call with buyer to discuss in detail.
These procedures are the same for all fuel request in some
cases we can work with foreign banks as long as they can deal with Wells Fargo
Chicago (its the bank we use in relationships with refineries)
Nothing changes on any fuel products the key is getting
buyers information please remember if they cant work with our account linked to
refinery at Wells Fargo (Chicago possibly Manhattan as well) then there is no
need for us to waste time with them.
This is how it works with D6 and yes we can get it from the
refinery we have the relationships.
- There are 50+ blends of D6
- We would need a signed spec sheet directly from the buyer
- Price Point
- How much needed
- Where it is going
- Banking they use and type of CL
If they cant get the signed spec sheet they have no
relationship with that buyer.
Seller Confirmed: SUN
This is NOT a CI DIP & Pay.
We have US Reseller from Gazprom who has an available 1M up
to 5M Barrel of JP54 for 12 months terms at USD$XXX per Barrel FOB Novorossiysk
or Vladivostok. . Please find below the NON-NEGOTIABLE procedure:
Product: Aviation Kerosine Colonial Grade 54 (JP54)
Price: USD$ XXX per Barrel
Port: Novorossiysk or Vladivostok
Shipment: FOB /
Supplier: US Reseller for Gazprom
1.0 Buyer sends Company Profile (CP) and ICPO and Bank Reference (BR) to
seller (including Buyer's Bank coordinates from a Top 25 Bank)
2.0 Seller sends SPA (Sales Purchase Agreement)
3.0 Buyer signs SPA and return it to seller which then signs
it then give copy to the Buyer
4.0 Buyer issues an irrevocable, transferable and divisible
Letter of Credit (“LC’) “at sight” in favor of
the Seller
5.0 Seller issues 2% Performance Bond in
favor of the Buyer
6.0 Seller issues the PPOP with Dip Test inspection by
Societe Generale De Surveillance (“SGS”) or any qualified equivalent surveyor
via the Seller’s Bank Officer to the Buyer’s Bank Officer for Buyer’s own
verification. The Partial Proof of Product” (“PPOP”) will be
as listed below, but not limited to the following documents:
1.
TANK STORAGE RECEIPT (“TSR”),
2.
INDIGENOUS DIP TEST ANALYSIS
REPORT - (“DTAR”),
3.
Refinery Commitment to Supply
Product,
4.
FRESH SGS INSPECTION REPORT
5.
Authority to Sell and Collect
(“ATSC”),
6.
Export License.
7.0 Seller shall then “call / collect” on the “LC at SIGHT” after the PPOP has been verified by the
Buyer or any of its representative/s.
8.0 Seller Transfer Title and the Buyer must pick up the
Cargo within 72 hours of verification.
9.0 SBLC (365+1) TT/MT103 for the 2nd to 12th shipment.
I am direct to the US Seller.
Please note that this can only work with a DIRECT BUYER
only. Once your buyer agrees to the terms, I will put them directly to the US
Reseller. Please also note that this US Reseller is one of the Top Major US
Supplier of Oil and Gas to the US GOVERNMENT.
Please request Buyer's ICPO and Bank Reference (as attached
format), immediately to proceed to the next step. This is the most secure way
of checking that the PPOP is available and lodge inside CITIBANK USA. This will
also eliminate any doubts of fraud to the PPOP as the US Law is very strict on
this kind of transaction especially if it involves the Bank.
This product is available now and will be on a FIRST COME
FIRST SERVE BASIS.
I have many more sellers not listed here.
If you are a buyer or buyer rep.
Send me a formal request .
KYC Know Your Client
Who are they? Ask them if they are a broker or a buyer. I
will only deal with buyer mandate or buyer.
Where are they located?
Have they bought before?
How long have you known them?
Are you direct to them?
What due diligence have you done to guarantee that they will
perform?
What are their buying procedure?
What bank do they use?
Where are their bank located?
How much fuel can they buy?
Once I know the volume, customer, destination, CIF or FOB I
can give you a quote. Spot or contract.
Truly not interested in giving out prices without know more
about the customer, length of contract, etc
Need genealogy to of the people involved.
As you can see I know my sellers. I expect you to know yours
and have done some due diligence on them.
Dear Buyer/ Buyer mandate
ReplyDeleteWe have Available FOB Rotterdam/Houston/Russia for JP54,D2, D6, JetA1 with good and workable procedure,whereby buyer will dip test in seller tank with proof of product. Kindly Contact us via (baevsergeyalexandrovich@bk.ru) for SCO.
BAEVSERGEY ALEXANDROVICH.