OPEC+ ratified a 188kbd July output increase at the 41st ministerial video conference on Sunday 7 June, the third consecutive hike, with August and September already signalled. OPEC+ is the wider producer group led by Saudi Arabia and Russia that sets monthly quotas. The decision lands against the cartel's own collapse: its 11 remaining members produced 16.33mbd (million barrels per day) in May, down 1.22mbd on the month, the lowest in 37 years. The hike restores roughly 15% of a single month's lost output, a ratio near 1:6.5.
The member detail shows where the barrels went. Iran fell 710kbd to 2.34mbd, Kuwait dropped 310kbd to 490kbd, under a fifth of pre-war volume, and Saudi Arabia eased 240kbd to 6.57mbd. The UAE, outside OPEC's quota framework since 1 May, added 300kbd to 2.44mbd and now sits beyond the agreement entirely.
The market had expected this vote to pass despite collapsing group output ; the new fact is the freshly quantified gap between paper and physical. OPEC's spare capacity enforced cohesion in 2020, when Saudi Arabia could switch idle barrels on. In 2026 the binding constraint runs the other way: a member base physically unable to lift, so the quota describes a fiction the schedule cannot revise fast enough to correct.
For a spreads desk the read is that the barrels OPEC voted to add do not exist, so the hike moves the flat price as a signal but commits no supply behind it. Set against the China demand hole that compressed the Brent-Dubai exchange-for-swaps last week , the market is short of physical crude at both ends, with quota arithmetic that cannot close the gap.
