The International Energy Agency (IEA), the Paris-based body whose monthly Oil Market Report (OMR) balances global supply and demand, reported on 10 July that OECD commercial stocks fell 62 million barrels in June, of which 44 million came from government reserve releases rather than commercial destocking 1. The OECD, the club of advanced economies whose members hold the transparent bulk of the world's reported oil, supplies the stock series desks read as the cleanest gauge of physical tightness.
That distinction matters because the backwardation this desk trades has rested on OECD stocks sitting at a 23-year low . Commercial destocking signals genuine demand running above supply; a strategic release is a policy decision that says nothing about the physical balance. Two-thirds of June's draw came from the second kind.
The agency also cut 2026 global demand to a full-year decline near 1 million barrels a day and put global refinery runs 6 mb/d below year-ago levels, even after a 1.5 mb/d June rise, with throughput seen down 2.4 mb/d before a 2027 rebound. That leaves product availability, not crude, as the tighter leg into peak season, which is where the diesel crack does its work. The report was written before the mid-July escalation, so its $77 Brent reference already trails the tape, and a curve propped by reserve barrels can slip toward contango faster than one held by real destocking.
