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European Tech Sovereignty
27MAY

Eighth US crude draw, 96.7% runs

4 min read
15:19UTC

EIA reported US crude stocks drew 8.3mb to 418.2mb for the week to 12 June, the eighth straight draw, with refineries running 96.7% and the distillate deficit stuck 13% below the five-year average.

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Key takeaway

An eighth crude draw at 96.7% runs reads as genuine tightness the diplomacy selloff cannot square.

The EIA, the statistical arm of the US Department of Energy, reported US crude stocks drew 8.3mb to 418.2mb for the week to 12 June, the eighth consecutive weekly draw, released on 17 June 1. That is roughly 26.8mb gone since mid-May, the fastest pace since February, against a Brent that shed about $13.73 over the same seven days. The numbers describe a physical market doing the opposite of what the screen says.

Refinery utilisation ran 96.7%, crude input 17.2mbd. You do not run refineries that hard into weak product demand, which kills the demand-weakness interpretation the Iran-diplomacy selloff implies. The distillate deficit held at 13% below the five-year average despite a 1.0mb build, and gasoline sat 6% below; the seventh draw to 426.5mb carried the identical 13% gap a week earlier . Eight weeks of 96%-plus runs have not closed that gap, which makes it structural rather than seasonal.

EIA inventories report a market tight now, while the Brent screen prices it loose later on an Iran deal that has not landed. The diesel crack floor that held through the May Brent decline now has fresh physical prints under it, deepened by Northwest European product tightness the desk tracks separately. If an Iran deal does land, restock cargoes take three to four weeks to arrive, so the inventory signal leads the flat price rather than trailing it.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Every week, the US government measures how much oil is stored in commercial tanks across the country. For the eighth week in a row, those stocks fell, this time by 8.3 million barrels. US refineries are running at 96.7% of their capacity, meaning they are processing almost as much crude oil as they physically can. Yet despite all this processing, there is still a shortage of diesel and heating oil in the US: stocks are 13% below the normal level for this time of year. This matters because it tells us demand for oil products is genuine and strong, even though the price of crude oil has been falling. The price and the physical reality are moving in opposite directions, and that gap usually does not last long.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

US crude draws at 96.7% utilisation despite Brent at three-month lows reflect the domestic incentive structure: the US Gulf Coast refining complex is processing domestic sweet crude at a margin advantage created by the Brent-WTI spread compression toward $4, which keeps US crude inputs cheap relative to international feedstock alternatives.

The draw rate accelerated from 7.2mb (week to 5 June, ) to 8.3mb (week to 12 June) despite Brent falling $13 in the same interval, confirming that run rates respond to crack spreads, not to flat price.

The persistent 13% distillate deficit, despite eight weeks of 94-97% utilisation, reflects a structural supply gap that high runs alone cannot close. The primary structural driver is the loss of Russian Baltic diesel as a supply source: Baltic Aframax diesel flows to NWE dropped sharply after GL 134A lapsed in April 2022 and never fully recovered. US gasoline's 6% deficit compounds the picture: the domestic demand call has not softened despite elevated retail prices.

First Reported In

Update #9 · Russia cliff landed while screens sold Iran

US Energy Information Administration· 18 Jun 2026
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