US commercial crude stocks fell 3.8 million barrels to 408.4 million in the week to 26 June, the EIA reported, extending a draw that had reached 418.2mb on 17 June at near-maximum refinery runs . The fall held even as Brent slid, which points to supply rather than demand doing the work. 1
The tell sits in the trade data. Crude imports dropped 291,000 barrels a day to 5.3 million, with the four-week average down 10.9% year on year. Refinery inputs rose just 85,000 barrels a day to 17.2 million, so plants were not pulling harder; the tank emptied because waterborne supply thinned, a Strait of Hormuz and freight footprint more than a US demand signal.
That distinction matters for anyone reading the draw as bullish. Import starvation reverses the moment cargoes clear, whereas genuine demand strength does not. The same week's product prints carried the more durable story.
