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Iran Conflict 2026
1APR

Diesel cracks hold as crude sells off

1 min read
12:41UTC

European diesel cracks held near $46 into early July even as crude sold off, with ARA gasoil stocks flat near 13.5 million barrels; EU rules keep the margin structurally bid.

ConflictAssessed
Key takeaway

European diesel cracks held near $46 as crude sold off, propped by an EU bar on Russian and Iranian diesel.

European and cross-Suez distillate cracks held their momentum into early July even as crude sold off, the products wire QCIntel reported on 3 July. 1 The European Diesel Crack, the refiner's margin on turning crude into diesel, had held near $46 since the start of the month , and ARA independent gasoil stocks, in the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp storage hub, stayed essentially flat near 13.5 million barrels . 2

No clean 6 July crack print was retrievable this window; the settlement wires that carry it sit behind paywalls, so treat the exact level as qualitative until Monday's assessments land. The direction is not in doubt: the crack held while the outright price fell, a second spread telling the desk product is tight even as crude eases.

The margin holds on a rule rather than a fresh squeeze. Regulation 833/2014 bars discounted Russian and Iranian diesel from the European pool, so the barrels that could compress the crack cannot legally reach it. That structural exclusion is why European distillate margins can stay bid while gasoil rebuilds elsewhere and crude softens underneath them.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A 'crack' is the profit a refinery makes turning crude oil into a finished product like diesel; the bigger the crack, the more money refiners make per barrel processed. Europe's diesel crack has stayed strong, near $46 a barrel, even as the price of crude oil itself fell in early July. This matters because it shows refiners' profits and the price of crude oil are not always linked. Here, EU rules keep the cheapest Russian and Iranian diesel out of the market, so European refiners can keep charging a wide margin regardless of what crude does.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

ARA's thin gasoil buffer traces to a supply-mix shift since 2022, well before this week's numbers. Saudi Arabia now supplies roughly a third of ARA's gasoil imports, routed the long way round through Suez, replacing Russian and Baltic barrels that used to arrive in days rather than weeks.

That longer, costlier supply chain leaves less room for error if demand spikes or a cargo is delayed, which is why ARA stocks have sat near multi-year lows through 2026 even when the weekly change looks flat, as it did into early July.

What could happen next?
  • Opportunity

    European refiners capturing a windfall crack while crude falls could face margin compression once ARA's Suez-routed stock buffer catches up, but Regulation 833/2014's exclusion of Russian and Iranian barrels sets a floor under how far that compression can go.

First Reported In

Update #14 · Brent-WTI blows out as the hike lands priced

Al Jazeera· 6 Jul 2026
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