The EIA, the US Energy Information Administration's statistical arm of the Department of Energy, cut its 2026 global oil demand expectation by 1.3mbd month-on-month in its June Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO), swinging from prior growth of 0.2mbd to a 1.1mbd contraction, its largest recent revision off the prior baseline 1. The same outlook forecasts OECD stocks at a 23-year low of roughly 2.3 billion barrels, about 50 days of cover, by December, and a 2027 Brent average of $79/bbl, well below the prompt. The next day, OPEC's June Monthly Oil Market Report (MOMR), relayed by Argus on Thursday 11 June, trimmed 2026 demand growth to 970kbd, a third successive cut, put required crude from the Declaration of Cooperation producers at 42.5mbd, and logged OPEC+ May output at 33.13mbd, down 185kbd 2.
The two cuts point the same way on demand and the opposite way on price. A 23-year-low OECD stock cover and a curve still in backwardation are the structural floor the demand revision does not remove, so time spreads stay bid even as the front month sells off on the softer call. That combination, weak flows over thin stocks, is the regime where flat price and spreads decouple: the demand cut sells the prompt, the inventory floor holds the structure.
The right expression sits in spreads, not flat price. Fade managed-money length, hold backwardation and the distillate crack, because the inventory floor underwrites the structure even as the demand call softens the screen. The distillate premium has held through the selloff, with US product still pulling into ARA on the transatlantic arb, so the crack stayed firm even as crude broke. The 2027 EIA figure of $79 prices in conflict resolution and supply recovery the prompt does not yet reflect, which is why this desk fades length without shorting the curve.
