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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
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Brent round-trips squeeze onto short base

4 min read
11:21UTC

Brent settled $92.69 on 11 June, down 5.3% from Monday's $97.82 squeeze peak, but a managed-money net short of -57,280 contracts and an $8.43 backwardation say the market is tight, not resolved.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Brent's 5.3% slide masks a -57,280 net short and steep backwardation, leaving the structure tight not resolved.

Brent settled $92.69 on 11 June, down from the $97.82 short-squeeze peak on 8 June , a 5.3% reversal across three sessions on US-Iran peace hopes after Washington signalled its latest strikes complete. 1 Brent-WTI compressed toward $1.70, tighter than the roughly $2 band at end-May . The flat price reads as a story resolved. Positioning and curve structure read the opposite.

CFTC (Commodity Futures Trading Commission) data for the week to 2 June put Brent managed-money net short at -57,280 contracts, a 109,000-contract swing from the +52,000 long of a week earlier ; the same report's WTI net short of -26,694 was already covered . 2 Managed money here means hedge funds and other speculative accounts, and a net short of that size against a market already bid for tightness is combustible. That short base is precisely why Monday's spike fired so violently and reversed so fast: the squeeze covered prompt barrels into a curve that was not waiting for it.

The six-month spread held near $8.43/bbl of backwardation, front month over December 2026, through the entire flat-price slide. 3 Backwardation that steep makes floating storage uneconomic, because a trader buying prompt to sell forward loses money on the roll, and it keeps the gasoil crack supported even as headline Brent falls. Positioning and the curve say tight; the flat price says resolved. Fading the round-trip means selling a structurally backwardated market into a book that is already short, which is a setup for the next squeeze rather than a trend to ride.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Oil traders often bet on whether the price of oil will go up or down. When a lot of traders bet on lower prices at the same time called a short position they create a pressure-cooker effect. When news suddenly makes the price jump (in this case a conflict event), all those traders have to rush to close their bets at once, which drives the price up sharply. That is exactly what happened here. The price jumped from around $93 to nearly $98 in a day, then fell back once the scare passed. But underneath that noisy flat-price move, the oil market still thinks near-term supply is genuinely tight visible in what is called a backwardated forward curve, meaning oil for immediate delivery costs much more than oil for delivery in six months. That tight-supply signal has not changed, even though the headline price bounced around.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The violent round-trip from $97.82 to $92.69 in three sessions has two distinct root causes operating simultaneously.

First: the positioning structure. A 109,000-contract swing to -57,280 net short concentrated squeeze risk at the short side, meaning any geopolitical shock generates maximum mechanical short-covering rather than trend-following buying. The money was not positioned for $97; it was forced there by covering mechanics, which is why the reversal was equally fast once the triggering event (US strikes signalled complete) resolved.

Second: the curve structure. At $8.43/bbl of backwardation, floating storage is uneconomic and the physical market is paying a premium for prompt delivery. That backwardation is not in the managed-money positioning it lives in the forward curve which means it does not reverse when managed money recovers its short. The result is a flat price that can move $5 in either direction on headline flow while the crack and curve structure holds.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    With managed money net short at -57,280 contracts, a fresh geopolitical shock before the 13 June CFTC print would trigger another short-covering spike, repeating the 8 June pattern and potentially retesting the $97 level.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Brent-WTI compression toward $1.70 reduces the transatlantic crude arb economics for US shale barrels moving to European refiners, compounding the already-closed distillate export route.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Meaning

    The divergence between Brent's volatile flat price and its stable backwardation structure signals that headline-driven trading is dominating futures flow, while physical tightness is repricing through the curve the two markets are running on different information.

    Short term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #7 · Distillate deficit deepens as runs max out

Trading Economics· 11 Jun 2026
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