
Would there be a US-Iran ceasefire extension or not? This very banal question seems to be resonating ever more strongly across the oil markets, as Iran’s rejection of any communication with the Trump administration on Monday gave way to another spark of hope on Tuesday.
Tehran’s very own Mehr agency announced the Iranian authorities are reviewing the most recent US proposal, capping the upside for Brent futures at $95 per barrel, at least for the time being.
OPEC+ Sticks to Production Hikes. With OPEC+ members set to meet for their usual monthly meeting this Sunday, media reports suggest that the oil group would continue to increase its collective production target by 188,000 b/d, as part of the gradual unwinding of 1.65 million b/d.
US Gas Falls as LNG Feedgas Slips. Henry Hub futures fell to $3.15 per MMBtu on Tuesday after feedgas flows to US LNG plants dropped to a 4-month low amidst spring maintenance, averaging 16.0 Bcf/d so far in June from 17.1 Bcf/d in May after an all-time high of 18.8 Bcf/d in April.
Venezuelan Exports Spring Back to Life. According to Reuters, Venezuela’s oil exports jumped to 1.25 million b/d last month, the third consecutive monthly increase after the seizure of President Maduro, with the US taking 558,000 b/d of the total outflows, followed by India’s 427,000 b/d.
Wildfires Start to Haunt Canada Again. Wildfires have returned to Canada’s oil sands region, with seven active blazes burning in the Fort McMurray and Lac la Biche regions of northern Alberta, potentially impacting Cenovus’ Christina Lake and Canadian Natural Resources’ Jackfish projects.
Stone Ridge Chases Devon’s Marcellus Gas. US hedge fund Stone Ridge Asset Management has reportedly offered around $8 billion for Devon Energy’s (NYSE:DVN) Marcellus shale assets, testing whether the newly enlarged producer is willing to shed a major gas position after its Coterra merger.
Moscow Bans Exports of Jet Fuel. Russia’s government has banned jet fuel exports until November 30, prioritizing domestic supply on the heels of Ukrainian drone strikes on the country’s refineries, restricting some 30,000 b/d of export flows that routinely went to supply Turkey’s airports.
Dangote Aims for 2029 Capacity Expansion. Nigeria’s Dangote refinery aims to boost its nameplate capacity by another 750,000 b/d within the next 30 months, beating all industry standards to have the ‘mechanical completion’ of its second crude distillation unit (CDU) ready by December 2028.
IEA Paints Picture of Summer Demand Collapse. Toril Bosoni, the IEA’s oil analysis chief, stated that global crude inventories could plunge to critical levels even before peak summer demand hits, claiming that it would take at least 6-8 months for flows via the Strait of Hormuz to fully resume.
10% of Australia’s LNG Could Be Gone Soon. Workers at Australia’s Inpex-operated (TYO:1605) Ichthys liquefaction plant threatened to bring the entire LNG terminal to a halt from June 11 due to a prolonged wage dispute, a sharp escalation compared to last week’s suspension of industrial action.
Iran’s Strait Authority Draws 300 Ships. According to Tehran, more than 300 non-Iranian vessels have contacted Iran’s newly created Persian Gulf Strait Authority since late April to secure safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz, with China-bound tankers accounting for 28% of the total.
Beijing Allows Teapots to Refine Less. China’s state planner NDRC has allowed independent refiners in Shandong to reduce output from June to no lower than 80% of last year’s monthly average, easing an earlier supply-security order that forced plants to maintain runs despite the closure of Hormuz.
CFTC Opens Door to Crypto Futures. The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission has approved KalshiEX’s listing of a bitcoin-linked perpetual contract, marking the first such regulated US product, with its policy statement vague enough to potentially accommodate energy products in the future.
Canada Demands Pipeline Guarantees. Canada’s midstream giant South Bow (TSO: SOBO) has flagged that it wouldn’t restart work on the 550,000 b/d Prairie Connector pipeline, the successor of Keystone XL cancelled in 2021 by President Biden, unless it had a ‘durable’ permit.
Europe Suspends Fertiliser Tariffs for a Year. The European Union has suspended standard import tariffs on most fertilisers for a year from May 30, seeking to cap the pricing upside for runaway fertiliser prices, with only Russia and Belarus susceptible to separate import tariffs.
Oilprice.com


