The Mar’25 Brent futures contract started to recover this afternoon, strengthening around 50c since this morning up to $80.93/bbl at 1325 GMT. However, Brent flat price then sold-off at US open (1330 GMT) down to $79.45/bbl around 1400 GMT, retracing to $80.08/bbl at 1750 GMT (time of writing). Crude oil prices have continued to decline as traders anticipate policy announcements from US President Donald Trump, including plans to boost domestic oil production and resolve the Russia-Ukraine conflict. In the news today, Chinese crude imports from Russia rose by 1% y/y to a record high of 2.17mb/d, data from the Chinese General Administration of Customs showed. Higher imports from Russia potentially demonstrate Chinese refiners’ appetite for cheap cargoes amid weak refining margins. Meanwhile, crude imports from Saudi Arabia dipped by 9% y/y to 1.57mb/d. In other news, Chevron has expressed interest in oil and gas exploration offshore Greece, the Greek Ministry of Energy and Environment stated today. Greece said that it would imminently announce an international tender and decide on the particular area designated for exploration this week. Finally, the cost to hire an oil supertanker on key routes to China has doubled since the newly imposed US sanctions on Russia, as per Bloomberg. Daily rates for VLCCs on the Middle East-to-China route (TD3C) surged 112% to $57.6k in the week to 17 Jan, while rates on the US Gulf-to-China route (TD22) soared 102% to around $55.5k. At the time of writing, the Mar/Apr’25 and Mar/Sep’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.99/bbl and $4.70/bbl, respectively.