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European Oil Markets
16JUL

Seventh crude draw, distillate gap widens

3 min read
09:39UTC

The EIA logged a seventh straight US crude draw of 7.2mb in the week to 5 June, yet distillate stocks fell to 13% below the five-year average even as refiners ran flat out at 95.3%.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

US distillate stocks fell to 13% below the five-year average at 95.3% utilisation, removing the transatlantic relief valve.

The EIA (Energy Information Administration) logged a seventh consecutive US crude draw in its Weekly Petroleum Status Report for the week to 5 June, down 7.2mb to 426.5mb, while refinery utilisation reached a cyclical high of 95.3%. 1 The detail that matters for middle-distillate desks is the pairing: maximum throughput on one side, a widening distillate deficit on the other. Distillate stocks slipped to 13% below the five-year average, two percentage points deeper than the 11% print a fortnight earlier , and crude inputs averaged 17.0mbd, up 80kbd on the week.

For readers outside the trading desk, distillate covers diesel, heating oil and gasoil, the heavy middle of the refined barrel that Europe imports from the US Gulf when its own refineries fall short. Running refineries near their physical ceiling and still losing distillate ground means the extra throughput is not closing the gap. That gap is what has held the ICE gasoil crack near $54/bbl since the EU gasoil import collapse to 695kbd .

This is the sixth-into-seventh draw in an unbroken sequence that began in late April , and the screen has read each one as routine. Gasoline stocks managed a token 0.2mb build and sit 6% under the five-year band, so the tightness is concentrated where Europe sources rather than spread across the barrel. An ARA gasoil position now has hard inventory data under the crack floor rather than a sentiment-driven level, and the US arbitrage that would normally cap a European squeeze is tightening, not loosening, at the worst possible point in the runs.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Every week, the US government counts how much oil and fuel is sitting in storage tanks across the country. American refineries are now running almost as hard as they physically can at 95.3% of their maximum and they have done so for seven weeks in a row, drawing down crude stocks each time. Despite that maximum effort, the amount of diesel-type fuel (called distillates) in storage keeps falling further behind normal levels, now sitting 13% below the seasonal average. This matters to European fuel buyers because the US is normally a backup supplier of diesel to Europe. At this utilisation level, that backup supply simply does not exist. European diesel prices stay high because the gap cannot be filled from the other side of the Atlantic.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The distillate deficit has two independent causes that compound each other.

First: US refining yield economics. Light-sweet domestic crude from the Permian runs through high-conversion refineries optimised for gasoline and diesel, not middle-distillate. At 95.3% utilisation the margin for incremental middle-distillate yield is exhausted. Shifting the yield slate toward more middle distillate at US Gulf Coast refineries requires a configuration change taking 18-24 months to implement, not a throughput adjustment.

Second: The European import collapse. The 695kbd drop in EU distillate imports since the Hormuz blockade removed the marginal buyer for transatlantic cargoes, tightening the ARA-USGC arb and reducing the incentive for US barrels to move east. The result is a deficit on both sides of the Atlantic simultaneously, with no relief flow between them.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The ICE Gasoil crack near $54/bbl remains structurally supported independent of Brent flat-price moves, as US export relief is unavailable at peak throughput.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    A further widening of the distillate deficit toward 15-17% below the five-year average would tighten ARA stocks toward the July 2025 low, putting heating-oil procurement ahead of the winter season at risk.

    Medium term · Reported
  • Opportunity

    Middle-distillate cargoes from the Middle East routed via Cape of Good Hope rather than Suez, now competitively viable on the longer haul, could partially relieve ARA tightness if voyage economics hold.

    Short term · Reported
First Reported In

Update #7 · Distillate deficit deepens as runs max out

EIA· 11 Jun 2026
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