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Iran – Hard to swallow a double insult

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

SEB - Prognoser på råvaror - CommodityBrent crude fell back 0.3% to $75.08/bl ydy after a strong rebound on Mon but is again up 0.8% this morning to $75.7/bl. It is taking little notice of the escalating trade war between the US and China which is threatening global growth and oil demand growth down the road. It is not even daunted by the repeated proposition by Russia to lift the production cap by 1.5 m bl/d.

Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities at SEB

Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities

Iran is naturally offended and disgusted by first having US sanctions reactivated forcing down its production and exports and then at the same time seeing Donald calling for more oil from from OPEC+ in order to push oil prices lower and appease US consumers so the Republicans can make a good mid-term election in Nov. Iran is thus naturally opposing any suggestion of an increase in production. Iran argues that if the oil price now goes high and the US consumers suffers at the pump then Donald is directly to be blamed for this due to the Iran sanctions.

Apparently it looks like Saudi Arabia wants more oil from OPEC+ because Donald Trump is asking for it as a return favour for reviving sanctions towards Iran and standing by Saudi Arabia as a long term ally. Thus even if the most sensible and responsible thing to do is to increase production in the face of collapsing production in Venezuela and now also Libya it will be extremely difficult for Iran to swallow a decision to increase production. It would be a double insult to see the “US bully” first having its way with Iran and then having its way with OPEC+.

It is important to remember that OPEC+ has been extremely lucky with its production cuts. Yes, they have been good and delivered on their cuts but they have also definitely been lucky. If it had not been for a continuous improvement in the global economy since late 2016 and thus strong oil demand growth and a collapsing production in Venezuela then things might have looked quite differently today. Then the group might have had to cut deeper and then yet deeper again in 2019. Now instead the five active cutters (Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, Iraq and Russia), can and should responsibly exit their cuts in order to avoid a further rallying in the oil price towards $100/bl in 2H18. An oil price of $75/bl is already taxing global consumers (ex-US) as when the oil price was $110/bl back in 2011 to 2014 due to the today much stronger USD. Thus having the oil price rallying to $100/bl in 2H18 at today’s dollar strength would not be good for the global economy at all.

By exiting cuts and reviving production the group is achieving two things. Firs it avoids creating unnecessary risk of hurting global growth and thus oil demand growth. Worst case if OPEC+ does not revive production would be a real spike in the oil price tipping the global economy into recession. In that case there would be no exit from current cuts as an option and instead the cutters would potentially have to cut yet deeper in the face of booming US shale oil production and a tanking global economy. Secondly, by exiting cuts now that it is possible and necessary to do so it will strengthen the position of the group to cut the next time it is a need for cuts by the group.

Thus the only sensible thing to do seems to be to revive production and exit cuts. However, as long as it seems like OPEC+ is abiding by Donald Trump’s call for more oil from OPEC+ it must be very difficult for Iran to swallow such a double insult. To us however it seem more like the real call for more oil and exit of cuts is coming from Russia. Its private oil companies are clearly eager to get back in business and away from their “voluntary” caps directed by Putin/Novak in cooperation with OPEC+. After all the goal of the cuts of getting OECD inventories back down to the rolling five year average has been reached.

It would be great if OPEC+ could unite behind exit of cuts and revival of production. The challenge would be to formulate a statement that removes any suggestion that the increase in production comes as a response to Donald’s call for more oil from OPEC+. It would however be difficult to avoid that Donald would take it as a victory to see a revival of production by the cutters in the group following he’s recent tweets on the subject. Iran’s oil minister Zanganeh has said that he’ll leave Vienna on Friday following the normal OPEC meeting and not attending the Saturday meeting including the ten cooperating countries.

We think that OPEC+ will either unanimously decide to lift production or the cutters will increase production anyhow. Cutters lifting production by 1 m bl/d in 2H18 and another 0.5 m bl/d in 2019 will however not lift total production by OPEC+ in our estimates due to declines within the group. It would probably look more like Iran is in control of the situation if it unites together with OPEC+ on lifting production.

Ch1: Weekly crude and product inventories US, EU, Sing, Floating given as change vs. start of year in million barrels.

Iran has a point that it does not seem like there is a need for more oil in the market as inventories are actually up ytd by 25 m bl. This does however not take into account likely further rapid decline in Venezuela’s production in 2H18 together with seasonally higher demand in the second half of the year. Latest disruption in Libya’s production adds to the tightening outlook for 2H18. The jump in weekly stocks does however look a little random and may just be a temporary issue due to refinery maintenance.

Weekly crude and product inventories US, EU, Sing, Floating given as change vs. start of year in million barrels

Analys

More from OPEC+ means US shale has to gradually back off further

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

The OPEC+ subgroup V8 this weekend decided to fully unwind their voluntary cut of 2.2 mb/d. The September quota hike was set at 547 kb/d thereby unwinding the full 2.2 mb/d. This still leaves another layer of voluntary cuts of 1.6 mb/d which is likely to be unwind at some point.

Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB
Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB

Higher quotas however do not immediately translate to equally higher production. This because Russia and Iraq have ”production debts” of cumulative over-production which they need to pay back by holding production below the agreed quotas. I.e. they cannot (should not) lift production before Jan (Russia) and March (Iraq) next year.

Argus estimates that global oil stocks have increased by 180 mb so far this year but with large skews. Strong build in Asia while Europe and the US still have low inventories. US Gulf stocks are at the lowest level in 35 years. This strong skew is likely due to political sanctions towards Russian and Iranian oil exports and the shadow fleet used to export their oil. These sanctions naturally drive their oil exports to Asia and non-OECD countries. That is where the surplus over the past half year has been going and where inventories have been building. An area which has a much more opaque oil market. Relatively low visibility with respect to oil inventories and thus weaker price signals from inventory dynamics there.

This has helped shield Brent and WTI crude oil price benchmarks to some degree from the running, global surplus over the past half year. Brent crude averaged USD 73/b in December 2024 and at current USD 69.7/b it is not all that much lower today despite an estimated global stock build of 180 mb since the end of last year and a highly anticipated equally large stock build for the rest of the year.

What helps to blur the message from OPEC+ in its current process of unwinding cuts and taking back market share, is that, while lifting quotas, it is at the same time also quite explicit that this is not a one way street. That it may turn around make new cuts if need be.

This is very different from its previous efforts to take back market share from US shale oil producers. In its previous efforts it typically tried to shock US shale oil producers out of the market. But they came back very, very quickly. 

When OPEC+ now is taking back market share from US shale oil it is more like it is exerting a continuous, gradually increasing pressure towards US shale oil rather than trying to shock it out of the market which it tried before. OPEC+ is now forcing US shale oil producers to gradually back off. US oil drilling rig count is down from 480 in Q1-25 to now 410 last week and it is typically falling by some 4-5 rigs per week currently. This has happened at an average WTI price of about USD 65/b. This is very different from earlier when US shale oil activity exploded when WTI went north of USD 45/b. This helps to give OPEC+ a lot of confidence.

Global oil inventories are set to rise further in H2-25 and crude oil prices will likely be forced lower though the global skew in terms of where inventories are building is muddying the picture. US shale oil activity will likely decline further in H2-25 as well with rig count down maybe another 100 rigs. Thus making room for more oil from OPEC+.

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Analys

Tightening fundamentals – bullish inventories from DOE

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

The latest weekly report from the US DOE showed a substantial drawdown across key petroleum categories, adding more upside potential to the fundamental picture.

Ole R. Hvalbye, Analyst Commodities, SEB
Ole R. Hvalbye, Analyst Commodities, SEB

Commercial crude inventories (excl. SPR) fell by 5.8 million barrels, bringing total inventories down to 415.1 million barrels. Now sitting 11% below the five-year seasonal norm and placed in the lowest 2015-2022 range (see picture below).

Product inventories also tightened further last week. Gasoline inventories declined by 2.1 million barrels, with reductions seen in both finished gasoline and blending components. Current gasoline levels are about 3% below the five-year average for this time of year.

Among products, the most notable move came in diesel, where inventories dropped by almost 4.1 million barrels, deepening the deficit to around 20% below seasonal norms – continuing to underscore the persistent supply tightness in diesel markets.

The only area of inventory growth was in propane/propylene, which posted a significant 5.1-million-barrel build and now stands 9% above the five-year average.

Total commercial petroleum inventories (crude plus refined products) declined by 4.2 million barrels on the week, reinforcing the overall tightening of US crude and products.

US DOE, inventories, change in million barrels per week
US crude inventories excl. SPR in million barrels
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Analys

Bombs to ”ceasefire” in hours – Brent below $70

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

A classic case of “buy the rumor, sell the news” played out in oil markets, as Brent crude has dropped sharply – down nearly USD 10 per barrel since yesterday evening – following Iran’s retaliatory strike on a U.S. air base in Qatar. The immediate reaction was: “That was it?” The strike followed a carefully calibrated, non-escalatory playbook, avoiding direct threats to energy infrastructure or disruption of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz – thus calming worst-case fears.

Ole R. Hvalbye, Analyst Commodities, SEB
Ole R. Hvalbye, Analyst Commodities, SEB

After Monday morning’s sharp spike to USD 81.4 per barrel, triggered by the U.S. bombing of Iranian nuclear facilities, oil prices drifted sideways in anticipation of a potential Iranian response. That response came with advance warning and caused limited physical damage. Early this morning, both the U.S. President and Iranian state media announced a ceasefire, effectively placing a lid on the immediate conflict risk – at least for now.

As a result, Brent crude has now fallen by a total of USD 12 from Monday’s peak, currently trading around USD 69 per barrel.

Looking beyond geopolitics, the market will now shift its focus to the upcoming OPEC+ meeting in early July. Saudi Arabia’s decision to increase output earlier this year – despite falling prices – has drawn renewed attention considering recent developments. Some suggest this was a response to U.S. pressure to offset potential Iranian supply losses.

However, consensus is that the move was driven more by internal OPEC+ dynamics. After years of curbing production to support prices, Riyadh had grown frustrated with quota-busting by several members (notably Kazakhstan). With Saudi Arabia cutting up to 2 million barrels per day – roughly 2% of global supply – returns were diminishing, and the risk of losing market share was rising. The production increase is widely seen as an effort to reassert leadership and restore discipline within the group.

That said, the FT recently stated that, the Saudis remain wary of past missteps. In 2018, Riyadh ramped up output at Trump’s request ahead of Iran sanctions, only to see prices collapse when the U.S. granted broad waivers – triggering oversupply. Officials have reportedly made it clear they don’t intend to repeat that mistake.

The recent visit by President Trump to Saudi Arabia, which included agreements on AI, defense, and nuclear cooperation, suggests a broader strategic alignment. This has fueled speculation about a quiet “pump-for-politics” deal behind recent production moves.

Looking ahead, oil prices have now retraced the entire rally sparked by the June 13 Israel–Iran escalation. This retreat provides more political and policy space for both the U.S. and Saudi Arabia. Specifically, it makes it easier for Riyadh to scale back its three recent production hikes of 411,000 barrels each, potentially returning to more moderate increases of 137,000 barrels for August and September.

In short: with no major loss of Iranian supply to the market, OPEC+ – led by Saudi Arabia – no longer needs to compensate for a disruption that hasn’t materialized, especially not to please the U.S. at the cost of its own market strategy. As the Saudis themselves have signaled, they are unlikely to repeat previous mistakes.

Conclusion: With Brent now in the high USD 60s, buying oil looks fundamentally justified. The geopolitical premium has deflated, but tensions between Israel and Iran remain unresolved – and the risk of missteps and renewed escalation still lingers. In fact, even this morning, reports have emerged of renewed missile fire despite the declared “truce.” The path forward may be calmer – but it is far from stable.

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