The eight-member OPEC+ subgroup is due to meet on Sunday 5 July to set August quotas, with the market expecting a fourth consecutive rise of roughly 188,000 barrels a day after some 800,000 barrels a day added across April to July. OPEC+, the producer alliance of OPEC states plus Russia and other partners that controls about 37% of global crude, has not yet decided; the vote lands after this briefing publishes. 1
Group output sat near a 37-year low in June even as the alliance ratified its July hike , so any August barrels are nominal quota rather than deliverable crude. Delegates signal the increase, and it reads as a claim on future market share, not oil that reaches the water next month.
Onto a falling crude tape with products already lagging, a paper increase widens the flat-versus-structure split this desk trades. Ministers either approve the hike or pause the unwind at the weekend, and the desk trades the result on Monday.
