Analys
OPEC+ can probably stomach a flat to slight contango market during a period where they lift production

Brent fell 3.9% as OPEC+ will produce more in April. Brent crude fell 3.9% last week to USD 70.36/b. Following a low of USD 68.33/b, the lowest since December 2021, it rebounded on Friday with an intraday high that day of USD 71.4/b. The message from OPEC+ at the end of February that they will start to lift production from April was the main bearish driver.

Net long specs are folding their cards as bullish prospects fade. Net long speculative positions in Brent and WTI fell 73.8 mb to 344 mb over the week to Tuesday April 4. It is still well above the 162 mb length on 10 Sep when Brent bottomed at USD 68.68/b. I.e. we came to a lower price level this time around with higher specs than on 10 Sep. Speculators thus has potential to shed more length if the bearish sentiment continuous.
Weakening of the crude curve – how far? OPEC+ preference is flat to backwardated. But the group can probably stomach flat to slight contango during a period where they lift production. The Brent crude structure has been in steady decline since the Brent 1mth to 60mth price spread peaked at USD 47.4/b on 10 June 2022. The latest signal from OPEC+ of more oil supply into a period of projected surplus calls for yet softer crude curve structure as rising inventories naturally should drive it into contango with front-end discount to longer dated prices. But OPEC+ has a natural distaste for a contango market as they then sell their oil at a discount to assumed non-OPEC+ marginal costs.
The 1mth to 60mth time spread has gone into deep contango three times over the past 20 years. Negative macro shocks in 2008/09 and in 2020 were countered by OPEC(+). But it took some time to drive the Brent curve back to flat/backwardated. In 2014/15 it was deliberate action by OPEC in order to ”kill US shale oil producers” but OPEC policy was reversed in 2016, and OPEC+ was created.
OPEC+ is unlikely to repeat 2014/15. The group is still in full control. It can probably accept a flat curve and stomach a little contango for a while. But deep contango like in 2008/09 and in 2020 will require a negative macro-shock. A flat curve implies a Brent 1mth at USD 67/b (= five year contract). But longer dated contracts have a tendency to weaken a little when the front-end weakens.
Brent crude 1mth down to USD 68.33/b last week and lowest since Dec 2021.

A substantial weakening of the Brent crude oil curve since July 2024. Still front-end backwardation. Longer dated price holding steady around USD 67/b. But it was closer to USD 70/b in July 2024.

The Brent 1mth still holds a small premium of USD 3.2/b over the 60mth contract. But clear fading since 2022.

The Brent 1mth to 60mth price spread. Deep contango three times over past 20 years. Deliberate by OPEC in 2014/15. But negative macro shock in 2008/09 and 2020. OPEC+ can probably accept a flat curve and stomach a light contango over a little period while they place some of their volumes back into the market. But deep contango requires a sharp, negative macro shock.

Net long speculative positions fell 73.8 mb last week. Still some length to shed if bearish sentiment persists.

52 week ranking of Brent 1 to 7 mth curve structure and net long speculative positions in Brent + WTI.

Analys
Oil prices climb, but fundamentals will keep rallies in check

Brent crude prices have risen for three consecutive days, gaining USD 1.7 per barrel since last Thursday’s close. On Friday afternoon, prices briefly dipped to USD 69.9 per barrel before rebounding to a high of USD 71.8 per barrel yesterday morning. As of this morning, Brent crude is trading at USD 71.67 per barrel, up USD 0.77 per barrel since midnight.

Why?
1. Chinese economic data
Two days ago, China released better-than-expected consumption, investment, and industrial production data for the start of the year, signaling economic resilience despite the need for further stimulus. With Donald Trump’s tariffs posing a risk to growth, China has responded by committing to policies aimed at boosting incomes, stabilizing equity and real estate markets, and reviving economic consumption – all of which naturally support crude and refined product demand.
2. U.S. strikes on Yemen’s Houthis
The U.S. airstrikes on Yemen’s Houthis on Sunday, March 16 served as a stark reminder of geopolitical risk, a factor that has not been fully priced into the market recently.
3. Rising tensions in the ME
Escalating tensions in the Middle East are currently (short-term) overshadowing concerns about a potential global oversupply. Overnight, Israel launched a series of military strikes on Gaza, breaking a nearly two-month ceasefire.
4. U.S. sanctions on Iran
Iran’s Oil Minister stated over the weekend (March 15) that Iranian oil exports are “unstoppable” and that Iran will not relinquish its share in the global oil market. The new U.S. administration has already imposed sanctions on Iranian crude, but these have yet to impact production levels significantly.
As of February 2025, Iran’s crude production stood at 3.23 million barrels per day (bpd), remaining above 3 million bpd since September 2023 (Platts data). Of this, Iran exports approximately 1.7 million bpd. For comparison, under Trump’s previous presidency, the U.S. withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal, and Iranian crude production fell to 1.95 million bpd by August 2020, significantly reducing its export capacity.
If the Trump administration reintroduces maximum pressure sanctions on Iran, the market impact could be substantial. In a worst-case scenario, where Iran loses its entire 1.7 million bpd of exports, and if Saudi Arabia or other major producers do not immediately compensate for the loss, global oil prices could theroretically see an upside of as much as USD 10 per barrel (Platts).
Bearish fundamentals still loom:
Despite these bullish factors, crude remains on track for a quarterly loss due to fundamental market weaknesses. Escalating global trade tensions threaten oil demand. OPEC+ is set to increase production from April, adding additional supply to a market already at risk of oversupply.
As a result, while geopolitical risks and bullish headlines provide short-term support to prices, SEB: forecasts that fundamental market conditions limit the potential for sustained price rallies.
Analys
Chinese stimulus measures drive Brent up and out of the USD 69-71/b trading range

A tight sideways range last week. Bearish equities on tariff fears. Brent crude rose 0.3% last week with a close of USD 70.58/b. It traded in a range of USD 68.63 – 71.25/b. Closing wise it held well within the USD 69 – 71/b band, held down by S&P 500 moving into correction mode and the Russel 2000 index moving into bear territory. Brent is up 0.6% this morning at USD 71/b with a high so far today of USD 71.8/b. That is the highest intraday price point since 3 March. Brent crude is thus pushing towards the upper boundary of the trading range over the past 8-9 days.

Chinese stimulus measures feed some optimism back in crude. The upwards move this morning is driven by news that politicians will boost people’s income, revive consumption and stabilize the stock and real estate market. The Chinese economy has been struggling for a while following Covid-lockdowns and a tanking real estate market. The tariffs from Donald Trump are now an additional challenge making it even more imperative to support the Chinese economy. While the signaled measures are supportive and positive, words like ”reasonable” growth in wages are used. There isn’t any sense of ”bazooka” stimulus measures as of yet.
Moving up with the negative fallout from the Trump tariffs is left for another day to worry about. The oil market is thus in a balance between the negative effects of Trump’s tariffs versus the positive effects of Chinese stimulative measures. The global oil market isn’t in surplus yet if we look at the 1-3mth time-spreads as a measure. The bearish downwards pressure on oil has come from the forceful selloff in US equities with natural fears that the tariffs from Trump will give both the US and the global economy a hard, negative kick. But today it seems that the positive political signals from China on stimulus there is set to lift Brent crude up and out of the depressed range it has traded in over the past 8-9 trading days. The negative fallout from the Trump tariffs is left for another day to worry about it seems.
Brent crude 1mth has traded in a tight range over the past 8-9 trading days when it has closed between USD 69-71/b. Today it looks set to move up and out of that range.

Analys
Large drop in total commercial petroleum inventories

Brent crude prices have risen by USD 0.8 per barrel so far this week since Monday’s opening. However, prices touched a weekly low of USD 68.6 per barrel on Tuesday before reaching a weekly high of USD 71.20 per barrel this morning.

Last week, U.S. crude oil refinery inputs averaged 15.7 million barrels per day, up by 321 thousand barrels per day compared to the previous week. Refineries operated at 86.5% of their total operable capacity during this period. Gasoline production declined to an average of 9.6 million barrels per day, while distillate fuel production also fell, averaging 4.5 million barrels per day.
U.S. crude oil imports averaged 5.5 million barrels per day, a decrease of 343 thousand barrels from the prior week. Over the past four weeks, imports have averaged 5.8 million barrels per day, reflecting a 10.6% year-on-year decline compared to the same period last year.
Total commercial petroleum inventories fell by a large 6.0 million barrels, contributing to some positive price movements observed yesterday evening and this morning. Although commercial crude oil inventories (excluding the SPR) increased by 1.4 million barrels, this was notably lower than the 4.3-million-barrel build forecasted by the API on Tuesday. With the most recent build included, U.S. crude oil inventories now stand at 435.2 million barrels, down by 12 million barrels compared to the same week last year.
Gasoline inventories decreased by 5.7 million barrels, exceeding the API’s reported decline of 4.6 million barrels. Despite this, gasoline stocks remain 1% above the five-year average. Distillate (diesel) inventories dropped by 1.6 million barrels, compared to the API’s forecast of a 0.4-million-barrel increase, and are currently about 5% below the five-year average.
Over the past four weeks, total products supplied, a proxy for U.S. demand, averaged 20.7 million barrels per day, a 3.9% increase compared to the same period last year. Gasoline supplied averaged 8.7 million barrels per day, showing a modest increase of 0.1% year-on-year. Diesel supplied averaged 4.1 million barrels per day, up by 9.5% from the same period last year. Additionally, jet fuel supplied saw a 1.5% year-on-year increase.
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