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Iran Conflict 2026
18MAR

OPEC cuts 2026 demand a fourth time

2 min read
06:00UTC

OPEC trimmed its 2026 demand-growth call to +0.8mbd, a fourth straight downgrade, even as OPEC+ pushes a fourth consecutive August supply hike.

ConflictAssessed
Key takeaway

OPEC cut demand growth to +0.8mbd yet keeps hiking supply, a market-share defence over price.

OPEC trimmed its 2026 demand-growth call to +0.8mbd in the July Monthly Oil Market Report (MOMR), a fourth straight downgrade, with non-OECD barrels carrying 740kbd of the 800kbd total and China cut 110kbd 1. The MOMR is OPEC's Vienna-published monthly demand-and-supply assessment, the producer-side counterpart to the IEA's report.

That softening call sits against OPEC+'s fourth consecutive August hike , deepening the market-share-versus-price tension Riyadh has run since the 5 July vote. Cutting the demand forecast while lifting the supply quota leaves the Alliance defending barrels it can sell now against a price it is helping to erode.

Saudi Arabia takes the largest slice of each increment below its own fiscal breakeven, so the vote reads as a market-share signal against non-OPEC supply rather than a bet on higher near-term output. The China cut of 110kbd does most of the work in the revision, and with the non-OECD block carrying the rest, the demand story the Alliance is pricing is an Asian one.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

OPEC, the group of oil-producing countries that includes Saudi Arabia, publishes a monthly forecast for how much more oil the world will want to buy next year. In July, it cut that forecast to just 0.8 million barrels a day of growth for 2026, the fourth month in a row it has trimmed the number down. Most of the remaining growth, 740,000 of the 800,000 barrels, is expected to come from countries outside the OECD group of wealthy nations, while China's expected growth was cut by 110,000 barrels a day. A shrinking demand forecast, published while the group keeps raising how much it produces, points to a widening gap between supply and expected buyers.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

OPEC+ faces a market-share-versus-price trade-off it has not resolved: continuing four straight monthly output hikes while its own demand forecast falls a fourth time suggests defending volume matters more to the group right now than defending price, a stance that echoes Saudi Arabia's fiscal pressure to keep barrels moving even at a lower per-barrel return.

China's 110kbd downward revision is not incidental: it reflects a structural shift in Chinese oil demand as electric-vehicle uptake and slower industrial activity reduce the marginal barrel China needs, a trend that shows up as a recurring drag in each successive OPEC forecast rather than a one-off adjustment.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Continued output hikes against a falling demand call risk a supply overhang later in 2026 if the downgrades prove accurate

First Reported In

Update #17 · EU freezes the cap a week; Brent-WTI gaps to $5.13

OPEC· 16 Jul 2026
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