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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
11APR

OPEC+ weighs a fourth August hike

2 min read
16:48UTC

The eight-member OPEC+ group meets on Sunday 5 July to set August quotas, with the market expecting a fourth straight hike of roughly 188,000 barrels a day.

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Key takeaway

OPEC+ is expected to vote a fourth 188,000-barrel hike on Sunday, a market-share signal not deliverable supply.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

OPEC+ is a group of oil-producing countries, led by Saudi Arabia and Russia, that meets regularly to decide how much oil its members are allowed to pump. On Sunday 5 July, eight of those countries will vote on next month's production limit. Most traders expect them to raise output again, the fourth increase in a row, adding to roughly 800,000 barrels a day already added since April. More oil pumped generally pushes prices down, but the group is choosing to prioritise winning back market share over propping up prices for now.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The eight-member subgroup, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, the UAE, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Algeria and Oman, holds monthly discretion over tranche size under the Declaration of Cooperation framework. The structural pressure to keep hiking despite a falling price is market-share defence: pausing now would reward Iraq and Kazakhstan, both chronic quota over-producers, for cheating rather than compliance.

That pressure sits awkwardly against OPEC's own June Monthly Oil Market Report, which trimmed 2026 demand growth for a third consecutive month ; hiking supply while cutting demand forecasts is a market-share bet, not a balanced-market call, and if Saudi Arabia unilaterally throttles back while other members keep pumping above their allotted share, group discipline erodes further.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    A confirmed fourth hike into a sub-$71 Brent tape raises the odds of a pause or reversal at the following month's meeting if prices keep falling.

First Reported In

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Oil & Gas 360· 3 Jul 2026
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