Saudi Aramco has announced a reduction in the official selling price of Arab Light crude oil for June deliveries to Asia, lowering it by $4 per barrel to a premium of $15.50 over the regional benchmark, according to Jin10. This decrease is less than the market's anticipated drop of $8 per barrel. In May, the price reached a historic high, and despite the reduction, the June premium remains the second highest on record. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has severely impacted export routes for Gulf oil-producing countries. Saudi Arabia is among the few nations still able to export crude oil via pipelines through the Red Sea's Yanbu port. Traders have noted that Saudi Aramco's official pricing primarily applies to crude loaded from the Persian Gulf's Ras Tanura port, with potential additional costs for supplies from Yanbu port. Saudi Aramco uses Dubai and Oman benchmarks for pricing, and since the Middle East conflict led to regional benchmark crude shortages, these indices have experienced increased volatility, with April prices falling from March highs.