Chapters
Oil market highlights
Feature article
Crude oil price movements
Commodity markets
World economy
World oil demand
World oil supply
Product markets and refinery operations
Tanker market
Crude and Refined Products Trade
Commercial Stock Movements
Balance of supply and demand
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2025
February 2025
Feature Article: The impact of monetary policies on the oil market
January 2025
Feature Article: Oil market outlook for 2026
2024
December 2024
Feature Article: Review of 2024 and outlook for 2025
November 2024
Feature Article: Global oil inventory developments
October 2024
Feature Article: Winter oil market outlook
September 2024
Feature Article: Review of world economic developments
August 2024
Feature Article: Crude and product price movements in 1H24
July 2024
Feature Article: Monetary policies impact on oil market
June 2024
Feature Article: World oil market prospects for the second half of 2024
May 2024
Feature Article: Non-Declaration of Cooperation (Non-DoC) oil supply developments
April 2024
Feature Article: Global oil demand in summer months of 2024
March 2024
Feature Article: Assessment of the global economy
February 2024
Feature Article: Review of global oil demand trends
January 2024
Feature Article: Oil market outlook for 2025
2023
December 2023
Feature Article: Review of 2023 and outlook for 2024
November 2023
Feature Article: Global oil market fundamentals remain strong despite exaggerated negative sentiments
October 2023
Feature Article: Winter oil market outlook
September 2023
Feature Article: A review of world economic developments
August 2023
Feature Article: Crude and product price movements
July 2023
Feature Article: The outlook for the oil market in 2024
June 2023
Feature Article: World oil market prospects for the second half of 2023
May 2023
Feature Article: Non-OPEC oil supply development
April 2023
Feature Article: Summer oil market outlook
March 2023
Feature Article: Assessment of the global economy
February 2023
Feature Article: Review of global oil demand trend
January 2023
Feature Article: Monetary policies and their impact on the oil market
2022
December 2022
Review of 2022; outlook for 2023
November 2022
Global oil inventory developments
October 2022
Winter oil market outlook
September 2022
Review of the world economic development
August 2022
Crude and product price movements
July 2022
The outlook for the oil market in 2023
June 2022
World oil market prospects for the second half of 2022
May 2022
Non-OPEC oil supply development
April 2022
Summer Oil Market Outlook
March 2022
Assessment of the global economy
February 2022
Review of global oil demand trend
January 2022
Monetary policies and their impact on the oil market
2021
December 2021
Review of 2021; outlook for 2022
November 2021
Development of global oil inventories
October 2021
Winter oil market outlook
September 2021
Assessment of the global economy in 2021 and 2022
August 2021
Crude and product price movements
July 2021
The outlook for the oil market in 2022
June 2021
World oil market prospects for the second half of 2021
May 2021
Non-OPEC oil supply development
April 2021
Summer oil market outlook
March 2021
Assessment of the global economy
February 2021
Review of global oil demand trend
January 2021
Monetary policies and their impact on the oil market
2020
December 2020
Review of 2020, outlook for 2021
November 2020
Development of global oil inventories
October 2020
Winter oil market outlook
September 2020
Assessment of the global economy in 2020
August 2020
Crude and product price movements
July 2020
The outlook for the oil market in 2021
June 2020
World oil market prospects for the second half of 2020
May 2020
Non-OPEC oil supply development
April 2020
Summer oil market outlook
March 2020
Assessment of the global economy
February 2020
Review of global oil demand trend
January 2020
Monetary policies and their impact on the oil market
2019
December 2019
Review of 2019; outlook for 2020
November 2019
Recent developments in global oil inventories
October 2019
Winter oil market outlook
September 2019
Review of global economic development
August 2019
Crude and products price movement
July 2019
Oil market outlook for 2020
June 2019
World oil market prospects for the second half of 2019
May 2019
Non-OPEC oil supply development
April 2019
Summer oil market outlook
March 2019
Review of global economic development
February 2019
Review of global oil demand trend
January 2019
Monetary policies and their impact on the oil market
2018
December 2018
Feature article: Review of 2018; outlook for 2019
November 2018
Recent developments in global oil inventories
September 2018
Feature article: Review of global economic development
August 2018
Crude and product price movements
July 2018
Oil Market Outlook for 2019
June 2018
World oil market prospects for the second half of 2018
May 2018
Non-OPEC oil supply development
April 2018
Summer oil market outlook
March 2018
Assessment of the global economy
February 2018
Review of recent global oil demand trends
January 2018
Monetary policies and their impact on the oil market
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June 2022
World oil market prospects for the second half of 2022
June 2022
World oil market prospects for the second half of 2022
Summary

Crude Oil Price Movements

Crude oil spot prices recorded solid gains in May, buoyed by strong physical crude market fundamentals. Tight oil product markets and high refining margins have prompted refineries to increase throughputs, boosting crude demand, specifically for light sweet crude. Planned and unplanned oil supply disruptions in several regions contributed to tightening fundamentals. The OPEC Reference Basket increased $8.23, or 7.8%, to settle at $113.87/b. Oil futures prices rallied in May driven by tightening oil products markets, near-term global oil supply risks amid continued geopolitical tensions in Europe, as well as the prospect of a firm recovery in demand after Chinese authorities started to gradually ease COVID-19-related lockdown measures. The start of the summer driving season in the Northern Hemisphere provided further support. The ICE Brent front-month contract rose $6.04, or 5.7%, in May to average $111.96/b and NYMEX WTI increased by $7.62, or 7.5%, to average $109.26/b. As a result, the Brent/WTI futures spread narrowed by $1.58 to average $2.70/b. Backwardation in the Brent, WTI and Dubai futures markets strengthened significantly in May and the
near-month contract spreads moved into deep backwardation as the outlook for oil market fundamentals tightened. Hedge funds and other money managers turned bullish on crude prices in May, raising their total futures and options net-long positions in ICE Brent and NYMEX WTI by 18.2%.

World Economy

World economic growth in 2022 remains broadly unchanged at 3.5%, following growth of 5.8% in 2021. US GDP growth for 2022 is revised down to 3.0% from 3.2%, after growth was reported at 5.7% for 2021. Euro-zone economic growth for 2022 is revised down to 3.0% from 3.1%, following growth of 5.4% in 2021. Japan’s economic growth for 2022 is revised down to 1.6% from 1.8%, after growth of 1.7% in 2021. China’s 2022 growth remains unchanged at 5.1%, after growth of 8.1% in 2021. India’s 2022 GDP growth remains at 7.1%, after 2021 growth of 8.3%. Brazil’s economic growth forecast for 2022 is revised up to 1.2% from 0.7% in the previous assessment, following growth of 4.6% in 2021. For Russia, the 2022 GDP growth forecast is unchanged, showing a contraction of 6.0%, following reported growth of 4.7% in 2021. Consumption remains robust, especially in the advanced economies, with an expected continued recovery particularly evident in the contact-intensive services sector, which includes travel and transportation activity, leisure and hospitality. However, significant downside risks prevail, stemming from ongoing geopolitical tensions, the continued pandemic, rising inflation, aggravated supply chain issues, high sovereign debt levels in many regions, and expected monetary tightening by central banks in the US, the UK, Japan and the Euro-zone.

World Oil Demand

World oil demand growth in 2021 remained unchanged at 5.7 mb/d. Oil demand in the OECD increased by 2.6 mb/d in 2021, while the non-OECD showed growth of 3.1 mb/d. For 2022, world oil demand growth is broadly unchanged to stand at 3.4 mb/d. Within the quarters, the 2Q22 is revised down, reflecting the lockdown in some part of China leading to lower-than-expected demand, while 2H22 is revised up on expectations of higher demand during the summer holiday and driving season. Oil demand growth in 2022 is forecast at 1.8 mb/d in the OECD and 1.6 mb/d in the non-OECD.

World Oil Supply

The estimate for non-OPEC liquids supply growth in 2021 remains broadly unchanged at 0.6 mb/d. Total US liquids production is estimated to have increased by 0.1 mb/d y-o-y in 2021. The forecast for non-OPEC supply growth in 2022 is revised down by 0.25 mb/d to 2.1 mb/d. Russia’s liquids production for 2022 is revised down by 0.25 mb/d. The US liquids supply growth forecast for 2022 remains marginally unchanged at 1.3 mb/d. The main drivers of liquids supply growth in 2022 are expected to be the US, Brazil, Canada, Kazakhstan, Guyana and China, while declines are expected mainly in Russia, Indonesia and Thailand. OPEC NGLs and
non-conventional liquids production in 2021 is revised up by 20 tb/d from last month’s assessment, representing growth of 0.1 mb/d y-o-y to average 5.3 mb/d. Growth of 0.1 mb/d is also expected for 2022. In May, OPEC-13 crude oil production decreased by 239 tb/d m-o-m to average 28.47 mb/d, according to available secondary sources.

Product Markets and Refining Operations

Refinery margins on all main trading hubs continued to increase in May, albeit at a considerably lower rate than in the previous months. With the conclusion of the peak turnaround season, rising product output started to limit the contraction in global product balances. In the Western Hemisphere, gasoline was the sole positive performer and margin driver across the barrel. Gasoline inventories declined in the US, while gasoil stocks showed some recovery. In Asia, all product markets strengthened, with the exception of naphtha and fuel oil, as regional transport fuel consumption improved amid the roll back of COVID-19 lockdown measures in China. Going forward, refinery intakes are expected to rise further to accommodate a seasonal pickup in fuel consumption and to replenish stocks.

Tanker Market

Dirty tanker spot freight rates fell back from the sharp gains seen the previous month. Suezmax rates declined 37% m-o-m and Aframax fell 22% over the same period, as ample availability overwhelmed the upward pressure caused by trade dislocations. VLCC rates declined 20%, with losses both East and West of Suez. In contrast, clean rates continued to surge, up 37% on average amid tight product markets. Dirty spot freight rates are likely to remain capped by ample tanker supply, while clean rates could continue to benefit from trade shifts necessitating higher vessel demand in the summer driving season in the Northern Hemisphere.

Crude and Refined Products Trade

Preliminary data shows US crude imports averaged 6.4 mb/d in May, a gain of 6% m-o-m, while crude exports set a new record high of 3.7 mb/d in May. US product imports remained steady, averaging 2.2 mb/d, supported by an increase in gasoline flows ahead of the driving season. China’s crude imports averaged 10.5 mb/d in April and preliminary data shows May imports at 10.8 mb/d, as inflows continued to pick up from the weak performance in February despite lower refinery throughputs. China’s product exports edged lower in April, averaging 1.0 mb/d, as declines in gasoline, diesel and fuel oil exports offset increased jet fuel outflows. The anticipated lifting of lockdown measures should support China’s crude imports in June, although this could be offset by refiners drawing from existing inventories. India’s crude imports jumped 13% to a new record high of 5.1 mb/d in April, as refineries maximized run rates and snapped up discounted Russian crude. Japan’s crude imports saw the fourth-consecutive m-o-m gain in April, edging up to average 2.9 mb/d amid expectations of improving product demand. Japan’s product imports, including LPG, were broadly flat, while product exports fell 30% m-o-m, with declines across most major products amid lower flows to China. OECD Europe trade flows remain a key uncertainty due to sanctions and the challenges of sourcing crude and refined products from other suppliers.

Commercial Stock Movements

Preliminary April data sees total OECD commercial oil stocks up 1.8 mb m-o-m. At 2,628 mb, inventories were 287 mb less than in the same period a year ago, 332 mb lower than the latest five-year average, and 299 mb below the 2015–2019 average. Within components, crude stocks rose m-o-m by 9.3 mb, while product inventories fell m-o-m by 7.5 mb. At 1,293 mb, OECD crude stocks were 129 mb lower than the same time a year ago, 180 mb lower than the latest five-year average, and 179 mb below the 2015–2019 average. OECD product stocks stood at 1,335 mb, representing a deficit of 158 mb compared to the same time a year ago, 152 mb lower than the latest five-year average, and 120 mb below the 2015–2019 average. In terms of days of forward cover, OECD commercial stocks fell m-o-m by 0.6 days in April to stand at 57.4 days. This is 7.6 days below April 2021 levels, 8.0 days less than the latest five-year average and 4.8 days lower than the 2015–2019 average.

Balance of Supply and Demand

Demand for OPEC crude in 2021 is revised down by 0.2 mb/d from the previous month’s assessment to stand at 28.0 mb/d, which is around 5.0 mb/d higher than in 2020. Demand for OPEC crude in 2022 is revised up by 0.1 mb/d from the previous month’s assessment to stand at 29.2 mb/d, which is around 1.1 mb/d higher than in 2021.