Brent traded near $70.6 to $71.7 a barrel on Thursday 2 July, with West Texas Intermediate (WTI) around $68, a fresh leg below the $78.96 three-month low of 17 June and the roughly 30% drop that closed the second quarter . The global crude benchmark is falling faster than the refined-product complex, widening the gap this desk trades between crude and cracks. 1
Two forces sit behind the slide. Traders are pricing in more OPEC+ supply at the weekend ministerial, and the Strait of Hormuz risk premium is bleeding out as the corridor reopens without incident. Neither force touches the physical diesel balance in Rotterdam.
A crude tape near $70 against a European gasoil crack still near two-year highs leaves the barrel repriced and the refining margin untouched. The desk trades that divergence, not the direction of Brent.
