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European Oil Markets
4JUN

Fujairah stocks at record low 6.5mb

4 min read
10:20UTC

Fujairah total oil inventories fell to a record low 6.5 million barrels in May 2026 as residual fuel oil dropped 27 per cent month-on-month below 3 million barrels.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Fujairah at record low confirms the distillate squeeze is global, not a European idiosyncrasy.

Fujairah total oil inventories fell to a record low 6.5 million barrels in May 2026 1. Residual fuel oil inventories averaged 27 per cent lower in May versus April, falling below 3 million barrels. Fujairah is the world's second-largest bunkering hub, and prompt bunker supply across all grades was tight and subject to enquiry. The data comes from the Fujairah Oil Industry Zone weekly inventory series relayed through S&P Global Platts.

The Asian leg of the stocks cycle tracks the European one. Tehran's bilateral Hormuz passage restrictions forced long-haul tankers onto the Cape route, redirecting bunker demand into Fujairah at the moment its storage was at its leanest. The Cape-rerouting volume cited in the EFS arithmetic shows up here as a bunker-side draw equivalent to a few per cent of total ARA gasoil, the same post-conflict demand pulse measured from a different angle.

The hub serves long-haul tankers that need refuelling outside the disrupted Persian Gulf transit zone, and it serves them at exactly the moment that demand profile has spiked. Bunker fuel tightness in Fujairah is a leading indicator for the next leg of the distillate squeeze: when residual fuel oil and marine gasoil tighten together at a major bunker port, refiners further upstream feel it on the crack within weeks.

The Atlantic basin has a third leg in The Gulf. Northwest European gasoil sitting at the deepest draw since July 2025, US distillates 6 per cent below the 5-year average, and Fujairah totals at a record 6.5 million barrels are the same balance sheet measured under three flags. Product stocks worldwide carry the post-conflict supply pulse, not European ones in isolation.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Druzhba pipeline is a Soviet-era oil pipeline that runs from Russia through Eastern Europe. Hungary and Slovakia are still connected to it and can receive Russian crude oil directly, a supply route exempt from the Western sanctions that cover sea-based deliveries. When the pipeline restarted in late April 2026, these countries regained access to Russian crude at around $76 per barrel, at a time when European market prices are above $100 per barrel. That $40-per-barrel saving makes their oil refineries far more profitable than competitors in the Netherlands or Germany who have to buy at world market prices.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The $40/bbl competitive gap between MOL/Slovakia and NWE seaborne refiners results from three simultaneous conditions. Urals-KEBCO pipeline crude is priced at roughly $76/bbl, below Brent at $100+. EU Council regulation explicitly exempts Druzhba pipeline deliveries from the price cap enforcement mechanism. NWE seaborne feedstock cost is elevated by Brent's Hormuz-disruption premium.

The Druzhba southern leg outage that preceded the late-April restart followed a unilateral Ukrainian transit disruption triggered by the russia-ukraine-war-2026 conflict dynamics. The restart itself was not a commercial negotiation but a consequence of the broader ceasefire context in which Ukrainian pipeline infrastructure politics shifted.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    MOL Group and Slovak refiners are generating approximately $8m per day in feedstock-cost advantage versus NWE seaborne peers, compounding into a $240m monthly margin windfall while Brent remains above $100/bbl.

    Immediate · 0.75
  • Precedent

    The Druzhba exemption's survival through the 20th EU sanctions package confirms that Hungary and Slovakia have successfully blocked any pipeline-delivery sanctions equivalent, setting a durable precedent for future package negotiations.

    Long term · 0.8
  • Risk

    Ukrainian transit politics (which caused the preceding Druzhba southern outage) remain a disruption variable: a further transit dispute could re-cut supply to MOL and Slovakia without Western sanctions involvement.

    Medium term · 0.65
First Reported In

Update #1 · GL 134B out, Rotterdam dark, OPEC+ pending

Moscow Times· 18 May 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Fujairah stocks at record low 6.5mb
The world's second-largest bunkering hub is short of supply at the same moment the Atlantic-basin distillate balance is already running tight, confirming the squeeze is global rather than European.
Different Perspectives
Kazakhstan (Tengiz / CPC pipeline operators)
Kazakhstan (Tengiz / CPC pipeline operators)
Kazakhstan's 322kbd Tengiz overage runs on the CPC pipeline, which bypasses the Gulf, making it structurally durable and effectively quota-exempt within the cartel. The Tengiz expansion reached plateau production in early 2026 and cannot be throttled without reservoir damage, setting a precedent for infrastructure-forced overproduction as an OPEC+ carve-out.
NWE sell-side macro desk
NWE sell-side macro desk
The divergence between sub-$97 Brent and a crack near $54 is the structural trade: long the crack against crude, with the June OFAC calendar as convexity on top. With the WTI unwind complete and Brent-WTI at $2 with no mechanical compressor, the Brent-WTI spread carries cheap optionality on the three June dates rather than a directional flat-price call.
Italian government / ISAB / Priolo Gargallo operators
Italian government / ISAB / Priolo Gargallo operators
Six GL rollovers without a completed ISAB sale leave the 320kbd Sicilian refinery under a sanctions-perimeter procurement overhang; the Italian Golden Power review has no confirmed timeline and can block the Ludoil deal independently of OFAC. Rome secured a 30-day EU derogation for ISAB in 2012 and is expected to seek one again if 27 June approaches.
Chinese state refiners (CNPC / Sinopec)
Chinese state refiners (CNPC / Sinopec)
Chinese seaborne crude imports ran at a decade-low 6.78mbd in May as refining margins stayed negative near -$2/bbl, with state refiners drawing on onshore strategic stocks rather than buying at $90-plus Brent. The demand hole, not a reopened Hormuz, compressed the Brent-Dubai EFS off its $6-plus peak; restart signal is margin recovery above $3-5/bbl.
EU Council sanctions directorate
EU Council sanctions directorate
Brussels adopted its 21st sanctions package on 26 May targeting shadow-fleet tanker listings and bank financing rather than revising the G7 price cap, a doctrine that routes pressure through freight and financing costs rather than cap arithmetic. The EU's approach compounds OFAC's tonnage drain without requiring G7 consensus on a new cap number.
US Treasury / OFAC
US Treasury / OFAC
OFAC has issued no GL 134D rollover as of 04 June, leaving a 13-day cliff on the Russian vessel-services umbrella while simultaneously running a negotiation-only clock on the ISAB divestiture to 27 June. The dual-deadline architecture, authorise-without-compelling on the Russian refinery track while closing Iranian buyer legs, is OFAC's deliberate June compliance design.