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European Oil Markets
30JUN

WTI unwind done, the spread is loaded

3 min read
17:30UTC

CFTC data for the week to 26 May shows WTI managed money flipped to net short -1,269 from +172,580 a week earlier, a 173,849-contract swing, while Brent rotated to net long. The book is now long Brent, short WTI.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

The selling that compressed Brent-WTI is spent; the next clean move in the spread is wider.

CFTC Commitments of Traders for the week to 26 May show West Texas Intermediate managed money at net short -1,269, collapsed from +172,580 on 19 May, a 173,849-contract swing in a single week. 1 The CFTC is the US derivatives regulator, and its weekly positioning data is the standard read on where speculative money sits. WTI is the US pipeline-leg benchmark on NYMEX; the long it built on the Iran memorandum is now essentially gone . Brent, the seaborne leg, simultaneously flipped to net long +52,000 from -24,966, so money rotated out of WTI and into Brent.

The book is now the classic geopolitical-risk architecture: long Brent, the Hormuz-exposed seaborne leg, short WTI, the domestic pipeline leg. Brent-WTI sits around $2 with no remaining WTI length to carry out. The spread has lost its counterweight, so it can only compress on genuine diplomacy or widen cleanly if the June sanctions cliff or Hormuz risk reactivates. The re-widening to $3.55 on 29 May showed the path of least resistance before the book settled flat.

A position this asymmetric pays as convexity into the calendar, not as a directional bet on the flat price. The 173,849-contract swing exhausted the speculative fuel for further compression. From here the spread carries cheap optionality on the three June dates rather than a view on where Brent settles.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Brent and WTI are the world's two main oil price benchmarks, traded on different exchanges and reflecting different supply routes. Brent is the European and global one, based on oil loaded from ships in the North Sea. WTI (West Texas Intermediate) is the American one, based on oil stored at Cushing, Oklahoma, delivered by pipeline. Investors and trading funds usually bet on both. Last week, funds that had been betting heavily that WTI would rise dumped those bets almost entirely in a single week , a 173,849-contract swing , after the Iran diplomacy news arrived. At the same time, they moved their money into Brent bets instead, because Brent is the one exposed to the Hormuz shipping route disruption. The gap between Brent and WTI prices is now around $2 a barrel with no counterbalancing position left. That means if anything reignites Middle East oil fears, Brent could jump sharply relative to WTI with nothing to slow it down.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The 173,849-contract WTI swing in one week has a specific mechanical cause: WTI open interest fell 78,977 contracts week-on-week , meaning the unwind was driven partly by position liquidation and partly by contract expiry. The Iran MOU arrived four sessions after the WTI long was established, meaning funds were already long on a thesis (tightening supply + GL 134C legitimacy) that the MOU invalidated within a trading week.

The Brent flip to net long +52,000 from -24,966 is a rotation, not a fresh build: managers exiting WTI re-entered Brent because the seaborne Hormuz-risk thesis survived the MOU. The MOU left the highly enriched uranium stockpile untouched and set a 30-60 day timeline, so the physical supply risk did not resolve , it just deflated enough to invalidate the WTI overland-supply squeeze narrative.

The residual ~$2 Brent-WTI spread is now the loaded outcome: with no WTI length to act as counterweight, any reload of Hormuz risk or a 17 June GL 134C cliff reads through directly into Brent-WTI widening rather than being partially offset by short-covering in WTI.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    With WTI managed money at net short -1,269, any Hormuz reactivation or GL 134C cliff event on 17 June faces no mechanical spread compressor, allowing Brent-WTI to widen toward the pre-MOU $4-5 band within one trading session.

    Immediate · Suggested
  • Consequence

    The Brent net long of +52,000 is exposed to rapid unwind if the Iran MOU reaches a signed deal that credibly re-opens Hormuz, potentially swinging Brent-WTI back to $1 or below.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Meaning

    The 173,849-contract speed of the WTI unwind confirms that the prior long was momentum-driven rather than fundamental: funds entered on the supply-tightness thesis and exited on the first diplomatic signal, with no remaining conviction position in either direction.

    Immediate · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #5 · Sixth straight draw, the flat price won't say

CFTC· 4 Jun 2026
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