French oil major TotalEnergies made the decision to buy large amounts of Middle East crude in March after its traders noticed the US Navy amassing ships near the Persian Gulf in February, its CEO told French newspaper Le Figaro in an interview published on Thursday.
"Our oil traders — and it's their job — noticed that the US Navy was massing ships around the Persian Gulf in February. They decided to take a position counter to the market, which was trending down at the time, and to buy, saying something was about to happen," CEO Patrick Pouyanne said.
The Iran war broke out on February 28 when the United States and Israel launched large airstrikes on Iran.
Total was the sole buyer in March of Middle East crude as the Iran conflict drastically cut supply, snapping up around 70 Oman and Murban cargoes, or about 35 million barrels, trade data showed, which helped send the benchmark Dubai price to a record high of nearly $170 per barrel.
The Financial Times reported in March, citing sources, that Total made more than $1 billion on the trade by using financial instruments such as futures, options and swaps to bet prices would rise.
The Wall Street Journal reported on May 19 that the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission was scrutinising a surge in oil futures trading that occurred moments before US President Donald Trump postponed strikes on Tehran in March, and was interested in at least three firms, including Total Oil Trading.
A spokesperson for Total said on May 20 that the company was not aware of an investigation and that the company had strict compliance rules. Total did not respond to a request for comment on Thursday.
TotalEnergies reported last month a 29 per cent jump in first-quarter net income, driven by March trading around oil price spikes due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz amid the Iran war.
"It could have turned out badly, because had the Strait of Hormuz been shut immediately we would have been physically prevented from filling up our cargoes in the region," Pouyanne told Le Figaro, referring to Total's big oil purchases in March.
Pouyanne said that because Total is a vertically integrated company, it was able to leverage its assets to take delivery of the oil at the Fujairah terminal in the United Arab Emirates, located just outside the gulf.
(Reporting by America Hernandez in Paris; Editing by Makini Brice and Susan Fenton)