Analys
Brent crude again heading towards the $60/bl danger-zone


Following its intraday low of $59.45/bl last week the Brent August contract staged a mild rebound this week and reached an intraday high of $64.1/bl on Monday before falling back down again. This morning it is selling off 1.9% to $61.1/bl on numbers from API last night indicating that US crude oil inventories probably rose 4.85 m bl last week.

US crude stocks have been rising almost uninterrupted since mid-march. Until late April that was partially along a seasonally normal rise in US crude stocks and thus less pressing. Since early May however the US crude stocks have just continued higher during a period where they usually decline. That is probably why Brent crude managed to reach its ytd high in late April but has been heading lower since then. Depressed by counter seasonally rising US crude stocks now standing 32 m bl above the 5yr average. Thus news by API that they probably continued to rise for yet another week last week is not taken lightly by the market. Negative equity markets this morning is not helping the matter either with “Quitaly” risk (Italy exiting the Euro) being one of the negatives.
With Brent crude selling off towards $61/bl this morning it has again come dangerously close to the 38.2% Fibo retracement level of $60.07/bl for Brent Aug contract or $59.74/bl for the rolling front month contract below which there is basically no support before $51.43/bl for the Aug contract or $49.93/bl for the rolling front month contract.
The big question is of course why US crude stocks are rising?
If there were no pipeline, refinery or quality issues a rise in US crude and/or product stocks would correctly be interpreted as a residual reflection of a running surplus in the global oil market. A part of this surplus would then naturally pile up in the US as well as everywhere else. Rising US crude and product stocks would then be a telling sing of a global oil market in surplus. This is the natural and instinctive financial market interpretation of the rising US oil inventories: “Wow, the global market must really be running a large surplus if US stocks are rising this much!”
The Brent crude oil curve has however been trading in sharp backwardation until late May pointing instead to a physically very tight global oil market. Since then the Brent backwardation has come off a bit along with speculative sell-off but it is still trading in backwardation. Usually a sell-off in financial oil contracts will lead to a softening in the curve structure as the sell-off mostly takes place at the front end of the curve.
The natural and instinctive interpretation that rising US crude stocks is a reflection of a running surplus in the global oil market does thus not seem to be fully consistent with the backwardated Brent crude curve structure.
The fact is that in the US today we do have pipeline, refinery and quality issues blurring the picture. These issues are leading to a widening Brent to WTI price spread. The wider it gets the more it means that the US has local oil market issues which are not necessarily an equal reflection of the same issues in the global oil market.
- US shale crude oil production continues to rise by the day (+83,000 bl/d MoM in June according to the US EIA). Building of pipeline capacity is under way but is lagging with a lot more capacity coming online late 2019 and 2020. Thus crude oil is for now naturally backing up in the US, depressing WTI and widening the Brent to WTI price spread.
- US refineries have for several reasons been running well below normal and thus processed significantly less crude oil than normal (5yr). In our calculations they have processed 31 m bl/d less than normal since week 6.
- US shale crude oil is very light and contains lots of gasoline. This leads to a natural overproduction of gasoline with such stocks now again above the 5yr average and the gasoline crack has come off again. US refineries may thus prefer to import more medium sour crude and process less shale crude oil thus leading to rising US crude stocks.
In total there has been a significant amount of refinery capacity out for spring maintenance/turnaround. These have now started to ramp up again and will thus process much more crude oil going forward. US refinery utilization is also rising.
There are obviously sensible concerns for the health of the global economy due to the ongoing US/China trade war with fears that global oil demand growth may falter.
Historically though it is quite rare that global oil demand grows by less than 1.0% per year. Intra-year though the global oil demand may look very gloomy. That is however usually a reflection of a refinery inventory cycle where refineries becomes concerned for global oil product demand, they buy less crude and sell more products from their inventories. Just 1-2% tweak in their normal behaviour drives rippling waves into the global oil market. In the end though it most often turns out that oil demand for the year turned out to be not all that bad after all.
We do think that rising US oil inventories may not be an excellent reflection of the health of the global oil market and as such that the market may over-sell Brent crude on the back of what is happening in the US oil market / US oil inventories.
This is especially so now that we again rapidly are narrowing in on the very important Brent crude oil support level around the $60/bl line. If broken it opens up for a significant over-sell down to towards the $50/bl line.
Ch1: Brent and WTI forward crude curves. Brent still in backwardation
Ch2: Changes in speculative positions do impact the crude curve structure as buying and selling mostly takes place in the front end of the curves. Thus contango and backwardation is not totally a reflection of physical market
Ch3: Brent crude and WTI curve structures in terms of time spreads of the 2 month contract minus the 6 month contract. Usually they track closely: Same shape = same fundamentals. Significant divergence since late 2018
Ch4: Net long specs in Brent and WTI have come off but still room for further sell-off if markets sour more
Ch5: US crude inventories on the rise. Most damaging has been the rise after week 17/18 as US crude stocks usually decline after that. Counter seasonal crude stock rise is bad news
Ch6: Total US crude, gasoline and mid-dist stocks have however risen less dramatically
Ch7: Global refinery outage has been very high this spring. They are now coming back on-line thus consuming and processing more crude oil. But as we seen have seen the Brent crude oil curve is already in backwardation.
Ch8: The Brent Aug contract Fibo retracement levels. No real support before $51.4/bl if $60.07/bl is broken
Analys
Tightening fundamentals – bullish inventories from DOE

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

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.


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

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.

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.
Analys
A muted price reaction. Market looks relaxed, but it is still on edge waiting for what Iran will do

Brent crossed the 80-line this morning but quickly fell back assigning limited probability for Iran choosing to close the Strait of Hormuz. Brent traded in a range of USD 70.56 – 79.04/b last week as the market fluctuated between ”Iran wants a deal” and ”US is about to attack Iran”. At the end of the week though, Donald Trump managed to convince markets (and probably also Iran) that he would make a decision within two weeks. I.e. no imminent attack. Previously when when he has talked about ”making a decision within two weeks” he has often ended up doing nothing in the end. The oil market relaxed as a result and the week ended at USD 77.01/b which is just USD 6/b above the year to date average of USD 71/b.

Brent jumped to USD 81.4/b this morning, the highest since mid-January, but then quickly fell back to a current price of USD 78.2/b which is only up 1.5% versus the close on Friday. As such the market is pricing a fairly low probability that Iran will actually close the Strait of Hormuz. Probably because it will hurt Iranian oil exports as well as the global oil market.
It was however all smoke and mirrors. Deception. The US attacked Iran on Saturday. The attack involved 125 warplanes, submarines and surface warships and 14 bunker buster bombs were dropped on Iranian nuclear sites including Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan. In response the Iranian Parliament voted in support of closing the Strait of Hormuz where some 17 mb of crude and products is transported to the global market every day plus significant volumes of LNG. This is however merely an advise to the Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the Supreme National Security Council which sits with the final and actual decision.
No supply of oil is lost yet. It is about the risk of Iran closing the Strait of Hormuz or not. So far not a single drop of oil supply has been lost to the global market. The price at the moment is all about the assessed risk of loss of supply. Will Iran choose to choke of the Strait of Hormuz or not? That is the big question. It would be painful for US consumers, for Donald Trump’s voter base, for the global economy but also for Iran and its population which relies on oil exports and income from selling oil out of that Strait as well. As such it is not a no-brainer choice for Iran to close the Strait for oil exports. And looking at the il price this morning it is clear that the oil market doesn’t assign a very high probability of it happening. It is however probably well within the capability of Iran to close the Strait off with rockets, mines, air-drones and possibly sea-drones. Just look at how Ukraine has been able to control and damage the Russian Black Sea fleet.
What to do about the highly enriched uranium which has gone missing? While the US and Israel can celebrate their destruction of Iranian nuclear facilities they are also scratching their heads over what to do with the lost Iranian nuclear material. Iran had 408 kg of highly enriched uranium (IAEA). Almost weapons grade. Enough for some 10 nuclear warheads. It seems to have been transported out of Fordow before the attack this weekend.
The market is still on edge. USD 80-something/b seems sensible while we wait. The oil market reaction to this weekend’s events is very muted so far. The market is still on edge awaiting what Iran will do. Because Iran will do something. But what and when? An oil price of 80-something seems like a sensible level until something do happen.
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