ARA total product stocks fell to their lowest since November 2014 in the week to 28 May, a 12-year low across the Rotterdam, Amsterdam and Antwerp hub 1. The calendar is what makes it a signal: May normally builds storage ahead of summer demand, so a multi-year low here points to supply scarcity, not a demand pull thinning the tanks.
The read lands on the European side of the crack thesis the 26 May briefing set out , the one that held the gasoil margin steady even as the ceasefire knocked Brent lower . A build-season low in the NWE barge complex says the tightness reaches Rotterdam, with the storage tanks short of barrels rather than thin on demand. Both sides of the Atlantic now show the same structural deficit.
For a European product desk the consequence is direct: ICE Gasoil and ARA barge cracks have a floor the ceasefire selloff has not removed, because the barrels behind them are genuinely short. Rotterdam carries the same turnaround risk as the US complex. If refinery runs rebuild the NWE tanks through June and Gulf product flows freely on a holding ceasefire, the ARA deficit resolves and the crack reverts toward its pre-war level rather than finding a new $40-45 floor.
