Brazil crude oil to China hit US$ 1.95 bn in February 2026, against a seasonal baseline of US$ 825 mn — a +136% deviation from the three-year norm.
February is not usually when the Brazil-China crude trade runs hot.
The seasonal baseline for that month, drawn from three prior years, sits at roughly $825 million. It reflects a predictable pattern: Chinese refinery maintenance season, short-cycle Petrobras scheduling, slower commercial activity around the Lunar New Year window. In February 2026, the figure landed at $1.95 billion — a +136% deviation from that pattern. Almost 2.4× the typical February read.
One outlier can be noise. But a billion-dollar outlier asks for an explanation.
The three-year average for February stands at $825 million. February 2026 came in at $1.95 billion — putting it in the range of what Brazil typically ships to China over a full quarter in softer years. Not a historical monthly record for the pair — those belong to the second half of the year, when refinery throughput in Shandong and Hebei tends to accelerate. But the largest February in the recent series by a wide margin.
Without access to Petrobras cargo scheduling data or CNOOC spot contracts, the analysis runs on hypotheses. Three are worth examining.
The first is demand pull-forward. Chinese refineries that typically program Q2 purchases may have shifted contracts to February, driven by uncertainty about Middle East supply lines. Brazilian pre-salt crude carries growing strategic value: ultra-low sulfur content, no chokepoint exposure on the shipping route. That premium widens when geopolitical risk rises.
The second is the FX window. The real weakened substantially against the dollar through early 2026, making the Brazilian barrel more competitive in dollar terms against Saudi or Gulf product priced at nominally similar levels. A currency tailwind of that magnitude can pull forward buying. Brazilian pre-salt crude already carries an intrinsic freight advantage to Asian buyers over Persian Gulf barrels — the FX move amplified that edge.
The third is strategic accumulation. China has a documented history of expanding crude reserves when prices are perceived as low. If Chinese buyers read early-2026 Brent levels as a buying window, February may reflect opportunistic procurement — not a structural demand shift.
The key question is whether March and April confirm or contradict February's spike.
If subsequent shipments revert to the $800-900 million historical range, the episode lands in the point-anomaly column — significant for FX hedging and freight pricing, but without structural implications.
If shipments instead hold above $1.5 billion for two or three consecutive months, the regime-shift hypothesis needs to be revisited. What looked like a seasonal deviation may mark the edge of a new floor.
Petrobras does not publish a shipment schedule, but MDIC ComexStat records with a 30-60 day lag will be the most reliable public tracker available. The port-level data from Santos and Itaqui, released through the Receita Federal's Siscomex system, can provide an earlier read for analysts tracking specific loading windows.
Seasonal breakage at this scale for this trade pair hasn't happened since the post-pandemic demand rebound of 2021, when pent-up Chinese industrial demand drove Brazilian crude volumes well above prior norms. The macro backdrop in 2026 is different — no suppressed demand queue, no obvious catch-up driver. Whether the result holds is still open. March data will be the first real test.
For exporters: if front-loaded Chinese buying is becoming a structural pattern, the traditional H2 concentration of crude shipments may be shifting — worth revisiting minimum monthly volume commitments in long-term contracts.
For importers: crude diverted to China in larger volumes reduces domestic refinery supply; monitor whether February's spike creates downstream product tightness in Q2 Brazilian fuel markets.
Source: MDIC ComexStat
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