Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
European Oil Markets
4JUN

US refiners chase the distillate crack

3 min read
10:20UTC

The EIA's report for the week to 22 May showed US refinery utilisation at 94.5%, crude drawing 3.3mb, and distillates 11% below the five-year average.

EconomicAssessed
Key takeaway

Utilisation at 94.5% into a falling Brent shows refiners chasing a distillate crack with a supply-side floor under it.

The EIA Weekly Petroleum Status Report for the week to 22 May showed US distillate stocks at 100.8mb, down 2.1mb on the week and roughly 11% below the five-year average, the tightest distillate balance since the 2022 post-Ukraine shock 1. The four-week distillate demand figure is down 2.1% year-on-year, so the draw is supply-side, not a demand surge papering over scarcity.

Refiners answered with capital. US utilisation jumped to 94.5% from 90.8% the prior week, crude inputs rose 652kbd to 16,430kbd, and crude stocks drew 3.3mb to 441.7mb 2. Plants running that hard into a falling Brent are chasing a crack margin the selloff has not reached, which is the behaviour you would expect if the product shortage is real rather than a positioning artefact.

The print sits under the 26 May crack call as its evidence leg, not a fresh thesis. The gasoil crack held near $54 through the full $14 Brent decline because the barrels were genuinely short, and these inventories say it deepened while the screen sold off. The counter runs through turnaround season: runs at 94.5% rebuild product stocks within weeks if the ceasefire holds and Gulf barrels flow freely, which would revert the crack toward its pre-war $35 rather than holding a new floor.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Every week, the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) publishes a snapshot of how much oil and diesel is sitting in storage tanks across America, and how hard refineries are running. This week's report showed two things: crude oil stocks fell by 3.3 million barrels, and diesel (distillates) stocks are 11% below the typical range for this time of year. Refineries were running at 94.5% of their total capacity, which is very high and means they are pushing hard to produce fuel while their profit margins (called crack spreads) are good. The diesel shortage matters for European markets because American and European product markets are linked: when American diesel stocks are low, less product flows across the Atlantic, keeping European prices firm even when crude oil prices fall.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The 3.3mb crude draw to 441.7mb and the distillate deficit have distinct causes that reinforce each other.

The crude draw is primarily seasonal: refinery runs at 94.5% in late May are consistent with pre-summer product build schedules. The year-on-year comparison is favourable because Q1 2026 runs were suppressed by Hormuz-disruption risk premiums on crude acquisition cost, so the late-May ramp is a catch-up.

The distillate draw at 11% below the five-year average is sanctions-driven on the supply side: Russian diesel and gasoil, which historically covered 30-40% of European import demand via re-export from Gulf refiners, has been partially displaced by sanctioned-grade rerouting to Asian buyers. The four-week demand run-rate being down 2.1% year-on-year confirms that the draw is not a demand surge; it is a supply shortfall that the utilisation ramp is compensating for.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Distillates at 100.8mb and 11% below average, with demand flat year-on-year, confirms supply-side tightness; the gasoil crack floor near $54 (ID:3622) has fundamental support and will not compress in line with the flat-price selloff.

  • Risk

    If utilisation stays above 94% into peak driving season and distillate demand recovers from the current -2.1% year-on-year run rate, the stock deficit deepens further, pushing the crack above prior highs.

First Reported In

Update #3 · OFAC loads a June squeeze the screen ignores

Reuters· 29 May 2026
Read original
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.