Analys
Crude oil comment: Ticking higher as tariff-panic eases. Demand growth and OPEC+ will be key

Higher last week along with equities and Iran sanctions. Brent crude gained 2.4% last week. It closed the week at USD 72.16/b and traded within a range of USD 69.9 – 72.51/b with the high of the week being set on Friday. New US sanctions towards Iran was one of the drivers while a continued rebound in global equities was an important ingredient as well. Brent crude is up 0.2% this morning at USD 72.3/b along with positive equities.

First round panic over harsh Trump tariffs is lifting with hopes for more targeted tariffs. Concerns for global economic growth and oil demand growth due to unexpectedly harsh Trump tariffs initiated a sharp selloff in equities as well as oil. Crude oil and equities have rebounded together as the first-round panic on Trump tariffs has lifted. Equity futures are rising 0.5% or more this morning on hopes that the next round of Trump tariffs will be more targeted and less broadly damaging. Looking at equities this morning one should expect Brent to move yet higher today.
Speculators are putting money back into the market. Net long speculative positions rose 45 mb over the week to Tuesday last week following an almost non-stop selloff since late January.
No oil market surplus yet. The question is mid-year onwards. It’s about oil demand growth and OPEC+. The global oil market is not yet running a surplus, but it will likely do so by mid-year. Key will be:
1) How will global oil demand growth develop in response to Trump tariffs?
2) Will OPEC+ decide to lift production yet higher after its first hike in April?
OPEC+ has already decided to lift production in April. Our impression is that that decision was partially influenced by Donald Trump asking for more oil and a lower oil price. I.e. that OPEC+ (controlled by Russia and Saudi Arabia) now has a slightly different approach to how they set production targets. I.e. that it is no longer just about price but also about the political relationship with Donald Trump. The Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee (JMMC) will meet on 3 April to decide what to do in May.
Net long speculative positions in Brent crude and WTI rose 45 mb over week to Tuesday last week.

Analys
Crude oil comment: The forward curve is pricing tightness today and surplus tomorrow

Brent crude ticks higher along with positive equity markets. Brent crude has been gradually ticking higher since its recent low close of USD 62.82/b on 8 April. Though 9 April was rather extreme with an intraday low of USD 58.4/b and a close the same day of USD 66.02/b. Brent is rising 1.4% this morning to USD 67.2/b along with higher equity markets in China and US equity futures (+1%). The daily fluctuations in Brent crude oil prices have been quite well aligned with fluctuations in equity prices which again are driven predominantly by the varying perceptions of how the US trade war with the world will progress and what the fallout will be.

Will Trump stay the course through economic pain or not? Will Donald Trump continue head-on, or will he pull back as pain emerges? It is clear that economic pain and damage will follow from what Donald Trump has done so far. That is already priced in. The big question though is whether he will stubbornly carry on or not. This looks like a ”game of chicken” where the question is who will blink first. Donald Trump or Xi Jinping? Will Donald Trump back off as US consumer-pain rockets and US economic activity falters or will he stay the course? Markets are highly conflicted on this as Trump has been extremely mercurial before and can suddenly change course. If he chooses to stay the course, without flinching, then obviously there is more downside to come. The current impression is that Trump is aiming for major changes and is willing to endure pain to achieve them.
Brent crude has taken direction from equity markets (here the US Russel 2000 index in orange) as it is a barometer of how bad the fallout from the tariffs will be on global growth and oil demand growth. The Russel 2000 is as of yesterday.

The Brent crude forward curve is pricing tightness and surplus at the same time. The Brent crude forward curve is currently pricing two things at the same time:
1) Supply/Demand is tight here and now (front-end backwardation)
2) But also, that surplus is coming (contango further out)
If the market is right, i.e. that surplus is coming, that Donald will continue head on with what he is doing, then the forward Brent curve will likely shift to full contango with the front-end of the Brent crude oil curve dipping into the 50ies. The big question is of course whether Donald Trump will carry head on without flinching or not. Staying the course through the coming economic pain.
Current Brent crude oil forward curve and how it could shift to full contango if the market shifts to surplus and stock building.

Analys
Quadruple whammy! Brent crude down $13 in four days

Brent Crude prices continued their decline heading into the weekend. On Friday, the price fell another USD 4 per barrel, followed by a further USD 3 per barrel drop this morning. This means Brent crude oil prices have crashed by a whopping USD 13 per barrel (-21%) since last Wednesday high, marking a significant decline in just four trading days. As of now, Brent crude is trading at USD 62.8 per barrel, its lowest point since February 2021.

The market has faced a ”quadruple whammy”:
#1: U.S. Tariffs: On Wednesday, the U.S. unveiled its new package of individual tariffs. The market reacted swiftly, as Trump followed through on his promise to rebalance the U.S. trade position with the world. His primary objective is a more balanced trade environment, which, naturally, weakened Brent crude prices. The widespread imposition of strict tariffs is likely to fuel concerns about an economic slowdown, which would weaken global oil demand. This macroeconomic uncertainty, especially regarding tariffs, calls for caution about the pace of demand growth.
#2: OPEC+ hike: Shortly after, OPEC+ announced plans to raise production in May by 41,000 bpd, exceeding earlier expectations with a three-monthly increment. OPEC emphasized that strong market fundamentals and a positive outlook were behind the decision. However, the decision likely stemmed from frustration within the cartel, particularly after months of excess production from Kazakhstan and Iraq. Saudi Arabia’s Energy Minister seemed to have reached his limit, emphasizing that the larger-than-expected May output hike would only be a “prelude” if those countries didn’t improve their performance. From Saudi Arabia’s perspective, this signals: ”All comply, or we will drag down the price.”
#3: China’s retaliation: Last Friday, even though the Chinese market was closed, firm indications came from China on how it plans to handle the U.S. tariffs. China is clearly meeting force with force, imposing 34% tariffs on all U.S. goods. This move raises fears of an economic slowdown due to reduced global trade, which would consequently weaken global oil demand going forward.
#4: Saudi price cuts: At the start of this week, oil prices continued to drop after Saudi Arabia slashed its flagship crude price by the most in over two years. Saudi Arabia reduced the Arab Light OSP by USD 2.3 per barrel for Asia in May, while prices to Europe and the U.S. were also cut.
These four key factors have driven the massive price drop over the last four trading days. The overarching theme is the fear of weaker demand and stronger supply. The escalating trade war has raised concerns about a potential global recession, leading to weaker demand, compounded by the surprisingly large output hike from OPEC+.
That said, it’s worth questioning whether the market is underestimating the risk of a U.S.-Iran conflict this year.
U.S. military mobilization and Iran’s resistance to diplomacy have raised the risk of conflict. Efforts to neutralize the Houthis suggest a buildup toward potential strikes on Iran. The recent Liberation Day episode further underscores that economic fallout is not a constraint for Trump, and markets may be underestimating the threat of war in the Middle East.
With this backdrop, we continue to forecast USD 70 per barrel for this year (2025). For reference, Brent crude averaged USD 75 per barrel in Q1-2025.
Analys
Lowest since Dec 2021. Kazakhstan likely reason for OPEC+ surprise hike in May

Collapsing after Trump tariffs and large surprise production hike by OPEC+ in May. Brent crude collapsed yesterday following the shock of the Trump tariffs on April 2 and even more so due to the unexpected announcement from OPEC+ that they will lift production by 411 kb/d in May which is three times as much as expected. Brent fell 6.4% yesterday with a close of USD 70.14/b and traded to a low of USD 69.48/b within the day. This morning it is down another 2.7% to USD 68.2/b. That is below the recent low point in early March of USD 68.33/b. Thus, a new ”lowest since December 2021” today.

Kazakhstan seems to be the problem and the reason for the unexpected large hike by OPEC+ in May. Kazakhstan has consistently breached its production cap. In February it produced 1.83 mb/d crude and 2.12 mb/d including condensates. In March its production reached a new record of 2.17 mb/d. Its crude production cap however is 1.468 mb/d. In February it thus exceeded its production cap by 362 kb/d.
Those who comply are getting frustrated with those who don’t. Internal compliance is an important and difficult issue when OPEC+ is holding back production. The problem naturally grows the bigger the cuts are and the longer they last as impatience grows over time. The cuts have been large, and they have lasted for a long time. And now some cracks are appearing. But that does not mean they cannot be mended. And it does not imply either that the group is totally shifting strategy from Price to Volume. It is still a measured approach. Also, by lifting all caps across the voluntary cutters, Kazakhstan becomes less out of compliance. Thus, less cuts by Kazakhstan are needed in order to become compliant.
While not a shift from Price to Volume, the surprise hike in May is clearly a sign of weakness. The struggle over internal compliance has now led to a rupture in strategy and more production in May than what was previously planned and signaled to the market. It is thus natural to assign a higher production path from the group for 2025 than previously assumed. Do however remember how quickly the price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia ended in the spring of 2020.
Higher production by OPEC+ will be partially countered by lower production from Venezuela and Iran. The new sanctions towards Iran and Venezuela can to a large degree counter the production increase from OPEC+. But to what extent is still unclear.
Buy some oil calls. Bullish risks are never far away. Rising risks for US/Israeli attack on Iran? The US has increased its indirect attacks on Iran by fresh attacks on Syria and Yemen lately. The US has also escalated sanctions towards the country in an effort to force Iran into a new nuclear deal. The UK newspaper TheSun yesterday ran the following story: ”ON THE BRINK US & Iran war is ‘INEVITABLE’, France warns as Trump masses huge strike force with THIRD of America’s stealth bombers”. This is indeed a clear risk which would lead to significant losses of supply of oil in the Middle East and probably not just from Iran. So, buying some oil calls amid the current selloff is probably a prudent thing to do for oil consumers.
Brent crude is rejoining the US equity selloff by its recent collapse though for partially different reasons. New painful tariffs from Trump in combination with more oil from OPEC+ is not a great combination.

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