The Brent-WTI spread, the gap between the two main crude benchmarks, widened about 60% to $3.26 on 6 July, the first trading session after OPEC+ confirmed its August output increase. Brent settled at $71.42 and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) at $68.16, both down on the day, but Brent gave up more ground, so the differential did the repricing rather than the outright price. 1
Brent had drifted to about $70 into the OPEC+ weekend , the tail of a quarter that closed down about 30% , and the confirmed hike was a number the market had already discounted. A vote that holds no surprise leaves the flat price still and pushes the tradeable information into the spread.
Brent prices the seaborne barrel that OPEC+ policy governs directly, while WTI tracks US domestic balances the alliance does not set. A signal of extra OPEC supply attaches to the Brent-linked leg first, so Brent softens faster and the spread absorbs the difference. That mechanism is why a pre-priced vote can leave the outright price inert yet still move the differential 60% in a single session.
The tradeable move this week sat in the spread, not the headline. A desk positioned on the flat-price OPEC story caught nothing, while the Brent-Dubai EFS and any TC2 arbitrage leg priced off a tighter Brent-WTI re-rate into the 2 August review.
