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Organization

of

the

Petroleum

Exporting

Countries13June2023Feature

article:World

oil

market

prospects

for

the

second

half

of

2023Oilmarkethighlights

iiiFeaturearticleCrudeoilpricemovementsCommoditymarketsv17Worldeconomy

10Worldoildemand

27Worldoilsupply

36Productmarketsandrefineryoperations

51Tanker

market

58Crudeandrefinedproductstrade

61Commercialstockmovements

67Balanceofsupplyanddemand

72DisclaimerThe

data,

analysis

and

any

other

information

(the

“information”)

contained

in

the

Monthly

Oil

Market

Report(the

“MOMR”)

is

for

informational

purposes

only

and

is

neither

intended

as

a

substitute

for

advice

from

busi-ness,

?nance,

investment

consultant

or

other

professional;

nor

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meant

to

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benchmark

or

input

data

toa

benchmark

of

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kind.

Whilst

reasonable

e?orts

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the

MOMR,

the

OPEC

Secretariat

makes

no

warranties

or

representations

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accuracy,

rel-evanceorcomprehensiveness,andassumesnoliabilityorresponsibilityforanyinaccuracy,erroror

omission,or

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The

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and

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Countries.

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owner(s).

The

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not

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orresponsible

for

any

unauthorized

use

of

any

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party

material(s).

All

rights

of

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MOMR

shall

be

reserved

totheOPECSecretariat,asapplicable,includingeveryexclusiveeconomicright,infullorperexcerpts,withspe-cial

reference

but

without

limitation,

to

the

right

to

publish

it

by

press

and/or

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any

communications

mediumwhatsoever;

translate,

include

in

a

data

base,

make

changes,

transform

and

process

for

any

kind

of

use,

in-cluding

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adaptations,

as

well

as

a

sound–video

recording,

audio–visual

screenplaysand

electronic

processing

of

any

kind

and

nature

whatsoever.Chairman

of

the

Editorial

BoardHEHaitham

AlGhaisSecretary

GeneralEditor-in-ChiefDr.AyedS.

Al-QahtaniDirector,ResearchDivisionemail:

aalqahtani(at)EditorBehrooz

BaikalizadehHead,

Petroleum

StudiesDepartmentemail:

bbaikalizadeh(at)ContributorsCrude

Oil

Price

MovementsYacineSariahmedSeniorOilPriceAnalyst,PSDFinancialAnalyst,PSDemail:

ysariahmed(at)email:

aedjangmemba(at)email:

jspitzy(at)CommodityMarketsAngelEdjangMembaWorld

EconomyDr.JoergSpitzySeniorResearchAnalyst,PSDOilDemandAnalyst,PSDOilSupply

Analyst,

PSDWorld

Oil

DemandDr.SulaimanSaademail:

ssaad(at)World

Oil

SupplyDr.AliAkbarDehghanemail:

adehghan(at)email:

tndamba(at)email:

dlinton(at)email:

dlinton(at)email:

ayahyai(at)Product

Markets

and

Refinery

OperationsTonaNdambaChief

Refinery

&Products

Analyst,

PSDTanker

MarketsDouglasLintonSeniorResearchSpecialist,PSDCrude

and

Refined

Products

TradeDouglasLintonSeniorResearchSpecialist,PSDStock

MovementsDr.AzizYahyaiSeniorResearchAnalyst,PSDTechnical

TeamDr.AsmaaYaseenDr.AzizYahyaiDouglasLintonMasudbek

NarzibekovVivecaHamederSenior

Modelling

&

Forecasting

Analyst,

PSD

email:

ayaseen(at)SeniorResearchAnalyst,PSDSeniorResearchSpecialist,PSDSeniorResearchAnalyst,PSDResearchSpecialist,PSDemail:

ayahyai(at)email:

dlinton(at)email:

mnarzibekov(at)email:

vhameder(at)Statistical

ServicesHuda

Almwasawy,

Head,

Data

Services

Department;

Mhammed

Mouraia,

Statistical

Systems

Coordinator;PantelisChristodoulides

(World

Oil

Demand,

Stock

Movements);

Klaus

Stoeger

(World

Oil

Supply);MohammadSattar

(Crude

Oil

Price

Movements,

Crude

and

Refined

Products

Trade);

MihniMihnev

(ProductMarkets

and

Refinery

Operations);

JustinasPelenis

(World

Economy);

Mansi

Ghodsi

(Commodity

Markets),Hana

Elbadri(TankerMarket)Editing

and

DesignHasan

AlHamadi,

Head,

Administration

and

IT

Services

Department,

In-Charge

of

PR

&

Information

Department;James

Griffin;

Maureen

MacNeill;

Scott

Laury;

Matthew

Quinn;

Carola

Bayer;

Andrea

Birnbach;Hataichanok

LeimlehnerOPEC

MonthlyOilMarketReport–June

2023iiiOPEC

MonthlyOilMarketReport–

June

2023OilMarketHighlightsOil

Market

HighlightsCrude

Oil

Price

MovementsThe

OPEC

Reference

Basket

(ORB)

fell

by

$8.31,

or9.9%,

m-o-m

to

average

$75.82/b

in

May.

The

ICE

Brentfront-month

contract

declined

by

$7.68,

or

9.2%,

m-o-m

to

$75.69/b,

and

NYMEX

WTI

front-month

contractdeclined

by

$7.82,

or

9.8%,

m-o-m

to

average

$71.62/b.

The

DME

Oman

front-month

contract

declined

by$8.69,

or10.4%

m-o-m,

to

settleat

$74.78/b.

The

front-month

ICEBrent/NYMEXWTI

spreadwidenedby

14¢m-o-m

to

average

$4.07/b

in

May.

The

futures

forward

curves

of

ICE

Brent,

NYMEX

WTI

and

DME

Omanweakened

during

the

month,

and

hedge

funds

and

other

money

managers

heavily

cut

bullish

positions

inICEBrent

and

NYMEXWTI.World

EconomyWorld

economic

growth

is

estimated

at

3.3%

for

2022

and

forecast

at

2.6%

for

2023,

both

unchanged

from

theprevious

month’s

assessment.

While

economic

activities

have

been

steady

so

far

in

the

1H22,

the

globaleconomy

continues

to

navigate

through

uncertainties

including

high

inflation,

higher

interest

rates

in

the

USand

the

Euro-zone,

and

high

debt

levels

in

many

regions.

The

US

economic

growth

forecast

for

2023

is

revisedupby

0.1%tostandat

1.3%,followingagrowthof

2.1%for2022.The

Euro-zone’seconomicgrowthforecastfor

2023

remains

at

0.8%,following

a

growth

of

3.5%

for

2022.Japan’s

economic

growth

forecastremains

at1.0%

for

both

2022and

2023.

China’seconomic

growthforecast

remainsat

5.2%

for

2023,following

a

growthof

3.0%

for

2022.

India’s

2022

economic

growth

estimate

is

unchanged

at

6.7%,

and

the

forecast

for

2023remains

at

5.6%.

Brazil’s

economic

growth

estimates

for

2022

and

2023

are

unchanged

at

2.9%

and

1.0%,respectively.

Russia’s

growth

is

also

unchanged,

with

an

estimated

contraction

of

2.1%

for

2022

and

a

forecastcontractionof

0.5%

for2023.World

Oil

DemandThe

world

oil

demand

growth

estimate

for

2022

remains

unchanged

from

last

month’s

assessment,

with

y-o-ygrowth

of

2.5

mb/d.

For

2023,

the

forecast

for

world

oil

demand

growth

remains

broadly

unchanged

at

2.3

mb/d.China,

Latin

America,

and

the

Middle

East

have

been

revised

up

slightly,

while

OECD

Europe,

Other

Asia

andAfrica

have

been

adjusted

slightly

lower.

The

OECD

is

expected

to

grow

byabout

50

tb/d

and

the

non-OECD

byabout

2.3

mb/d

in

2023.World

Oil

SupplyNon-OPEC

liquids

supply

is

estimated

to

have

grown

by

1.9

mb/d

in

2022,

broadly

unchanged

from

theprevious

month’s

assessment.

The

main

drivers

of

liquids

supply

growth

for

2022

were

the

US,

Russia,Canada,

Guyana,

China

and

Brazil,

while

the

largest

declines

were

seen

in

Norway

and

Thailand.

For

2023,non-OPEC

liquids

production

growth

remains

unchanged

from

last

month’s

assessment,

at

1.4mb/d,

y-o-y.The

main

drivers

of

liquids

supply

growth

are

expected

to

be

the

US,

Brazil,

Norway,

Canada,

Kazakhstan

andGuyana,

while

declines

are

expected

primarily

from

Russia.

Uncertainties

remain

related

to

US

shale

oil

outputpotential

and

unplanned

maintenance

in

2023.

OPEC

NGLs

and

non-conventional

liquids

are

forecast

to

growby

0.1

mb/d

in

2022

to

average

5.39

mb/d

and

by

50

tb/d

to

average

5.44

mb/d

in

2023.

OPEC-13

crude

oilproduction

in

May

decreased

by

464

tb/d

m-o-m

to

average

28.06

mb/d,

according

to

available

secondarysources.Product

Markets

and

Refining

OperationsRefinery

margins

in

the

US

Gulf

Coast

(USGC)

declined

for

the

second-consecutive

month

in

May

to

theirlowest

level

this

year.

This

downturn

attributable

torising

refinery

product

output

levels

was

considerablymore

limited

than

that

seen

in

April,

with

most

of

the

decline

driven

by

transport

fuels.

InRotterdam,marginsshowedsolidgainsbackedby

strongergasolineandfueloilmarkets.Lowerfeedstock

pricesprovidedfurthersupport

and

led

to

mild

gains

for

Asian

refining

economics.

Preliminary

estimates

indicate

that

the

globalrefinery

intakerosefurther

m-o-m

inMay,

increasing556tb/dto

average81.3mb/d.OPEC

MonthlyOilMarketReport–

June

2023iiiOilMarketHighlightsTanker

MarketDirty

freight

rates

showed

mixed

movement

in

May.

VLCCs

experienced

m-o-m

declines

on

all

monitored

routes,with

Middle

East-to-East

spot

freight

rates

falling

27%

as

long-haul

tanker

demand

declined.

Suezmax

ratesrecovered

some

of

the

previous

month’s

losses,

with

rates

on

the

USGC-to-Europe

route

increasing

35%.Aframax

spot

freight

rates

showed

a

strong

performance

on

the

Caribbean-to-US

East

Coast

route,

which

jumped121%,

while

Mediterranean

routes

saw

a

mixed

performance,

with

intra-Med

rates

up

2%

and

Mediterranean-to-Northwest

Europeratesdown9%.

Cleanfreightrates

showed

declines

on

all

reportedroutes,withthesteepestlosseson

West

ofSuez

routes.Crude

and

Refined

Products

TradePreliminary

data

shows

US

crude

imports

increased

m-o-m

in

May

to

average

6.4

mb/d.

US

crude

exportsexhibited

a

still

strong

performance,

averaging

4.3

mb/d,

although

lower

than

the

record

level

of

4.8

mb/dachieved

in

March.

China’s

crude

imports

in

April

fell

back

from

the

high

levels

of

the

previous

month,

to

averageabout

10.3

mb/d,

although

preliminary

data

shows

a

recovery

in

May

to

average

12.2

mb/d.

China’s

productimports

jumped

26%

toreacha

recordhighof

2.2mb/d,driven

by

inflows

of

LPG,

naphthaandfueloil.

In

April,India’scrudeimportsslipped

further

fromthe10-month

high

seenin

February

to

averagea

still

robust4.8

mb/d.India’s

product

exports

fell

sharply

from

last

month’s

high

levels

to

average

1.1

mb/d.

Japan’s

crude

importsrecovered

in

April

from

seasonal

lows,

averaging

2.9

mb/d.

Japan’s

product

exports,

including

LPG,

continuedto

decline,

averaging

378tb/d

in

April,thelowest

since

the

same

month

last

year.Preliminary

estimatesfor

Mayshow

OECD

Europe

crude

imports

declined

seasonally,

while

tanker

tracking

data

shows

product

importsremaining

close

to

year-ago

levels.Commercial

Stock

MovementsPreliminary

April

2023

data

sees

total

OECD

commercial

oil

stocks

up

m-o-m

by30.2

mb.

At

2,808

mb,

theywere144mb

higher

thanthesametimeone

year

ago,

but

74

mb

lower

than

the

latestfive-year

averageand119

mb

below

the

2015–2019

average.

Within

the

components,

crude

stocks

fell

by

0.5

mb,

while

productstocks

rose

m-o-m

by30.6

mb.

OECD

commercial

crude

stocks

stood

at

1,384

mb

in

April.

This

was

77

mbhigherthanthe

same

time

ayear

ago,but42mb

below

thelatestfive-year

averageand88

mb

lower

thanthe2015–2019

average.Total

product

inventories

stoodat1,424mb,representing

a

surplus

of

66mb

above

thesametime

a

year

ago,However,this

was

32

mb

lower

thanthelatestfive-year

averageand30

mb

belowthe2015–2019

average.

In

terms

of

days

of

forward

cover,

OECD

commercial

stocks

fell

m-o-m

by

0.1

days

inApril

to

stand

at

60.9days.

This

is

2.9

days

above

the

April

2022

level,

but

3.3

days

lower

than

the

latestfive-yearaverageand1.3daysbelowthe2015–2019average.Balance

of

Supply

and

DemandDemand

for

OPEC

crude

in

2022

remains

unchanged

from

last

month’s

assessment

at

28.4mb/d.

This

isaround

0.5

mb/d

higher

than

in

2021.

Demand

for

OPEC

crude

in

2023

also

remains

unchanged

from

theprevious

assessmentat29.3mb/d.Thisisaround0.9mb/d

higherthanin

2022.ivOPEC

MonthlyOilMarketReport–June

2023FeatureArticleFeature

ArticleWorld

oil

market

prospects

for

the

second

half

of

2023So

far,

both

the

US

and

the

Euro-zone

have

experienced

steady

economic

growth

this

year.

Meanwhile,India,

Brazil

and

Russia

saw

economic

growths

that

clearly

surpassed

expectations.

Moreover,

the

positiveeffects

of

China’s

reopening

have

continued

supporting

global

economic

growth.

However,

global

economicgrowth

in

2H23

continuesnavigating

through

uncertaintiesincluding

elevated

key-policy

rates,

persistentlyhigh

core

inflation

and

a

continued

tight

labour

market.

Moreover,

it

is

still

unclear

how

the

geopoliticalconflictin

EasternEuropewillbe

resolved.Since

the

beginning

of

the

year,

the

main

economic

Graph

1:

World

GDP

growth,

q-o-q

and

y-o-ysupport,atthe

globallevel,fromthe

services

sector,especially

travel

and

transportation,

tourism,

leisureand

hospitality.

On

the

other

hand,

themanufacturing

sector’s

dynamic

has

been

very

muchlacklustre.

This

trend

is

expected

to

lead

into

thesummerholiday

seasonin

thenorthernhemisphere,supported

by

still-sufficient

disposable

incomelevels,

particularlyin

advanced

economies.

China

isalso

benefitting

frompent-up

demand

in

the

servicessector

after

around

three

years

of

lockdowns.However,

as

the

services

sector-related

spendingtightens

in

3Q23,

inflation,

financial

tightening

andrising

geopolitical

uncertainty,

may

dampen

thegrowth

dynamic

towards

the

end

of

the

year(see

Graph

1).%32.62101.00.70.70.14Q23*

FY2023**1Q23*2Q23*3Q23*Note:

*

Q-o-q

change

and

**

Y-o-y

change.

Source:

OPEC.Turning

to

the

oil

market,

global

oil

demand

is

forecast

to

grow

by

2.4

mb/d

y-o-y

in

2H23.

For

the

year,world

oil

demand

is

forecast

to

grow

by2.3

mb/d

(see

Graph

2).

In

the

OECD,

oil

demand

is

estimated

toincrease

by0.2

mb/d

in

2H23

y-o-y,

driven

mostly

bythe

US

and

Asia

Pacific.

However,

OECD

Europe

isanticipated

to

be

weak.

In

terms

of

products,

jet

kerosene

and

gasoline

are

anticipated

to

be

the

drivers

ofdemand

in

the

region,

while

diesel

is

expected

tobe

subdued

byweak

economic

activityand

geopoliticallyinduced

supply-chain

bottlenecks.

Naphtha

is

also

anticipated

to

remain

in

a

contraction

zone

due

to

weakpetrochemical

margins.

In

the

non-OECD,

the

opening

of

China

and

better-than-expected

performance

inother

countries

of

the

region

are

expected

to

drive

oil

demand.

Improving

driving

mobility

and

air

travelrecovery,

as

well

as

improvements

in

manufacturing

sector

activity,

are

projected

to

support

jet/

kerosene,gasoline

and

distillate

demand.

Oil

demand

in

the

non-OECD

is

forecast

to

grow

on

average

by

2.2

mb/dy-o-y

in2H23,with

China

remaining

the

largest

contributor

to

oildemand

growth.

In

terms

of

main

products,jetfuelis

expectedtolead

oildemandgrowthin

theregion,followedby

gasoline

and

diesel,

and

supportedby

the“otherproducts”category.Following

the

estimated

growth

of

2.2

mb/d

y-o-y

in

Graph

2:

World

oil

demand

and

Non-OPEC

supply,y-o-ychanges1H23,

the

non-OPEC

liquids

supply

is

forecast

togrowby

0.7mb/d

y-o-yin

2H23.

For

the

entire

year,

mb/d3the

non-OPEC

liquids

supply

is

anticipated

to

growby

1.4mb/dy-o-y

(see

Graph

2).2.3On

a

regional

basis,

OECD

liquids

supply

isexpected

to

grow

by1.3

mb/d

y-o-y

in

2H23,

mainlyin

the

US,with

a

projected

increase

of0.8

mb/d,

andadditional

incremental

production

is

expected

tocome

from

Norway

and

Canada.

However,

liquidssupply

fromthe

non-OECD

region

is

forecast

to

dropby

0.7mb/d

y-o-y

in

2H23.

Higher

production

fromLatin

America,

Other

Eurasia

and

China

is

forecastto

be

more

than

offset

by

lower

output

in

Russia,amid

uncertainty,

particularly

regarding

US

shale

oildevelopments,whichcontinueto

dominatein

2H23.2101.41Q232Q233Q234Q232023World

oil

demandNon-OPEC

supplyNote:

2023

=

Forecast.

Source:OPEC.Given

the

uncertainty

in

the

world

economy

and

global

oil

markets,

the

Declaration

of

Cooperation

(DoC)countries

have

decided

in

their

35th

OPEC

and

non-OPEC

Ministerial

Meeting

to

continue

their

precautious,proactive,

and

pre-emptive

approach

and

hence

maintain

their

production

adjustments

until

end

of

2024,whilemonitoringthemarket

closely

to

supportstability

in

themonthstocome.OPEC

MonthlyOilMarketReport–

June

2023vFeatureArticleviOPEC

MonthlyOilMarketReport–June2023Tableof

ContentsTable

of

ContentsOil

Market

HighlightsiiiFeature

ArticlevWorld

oil

market

prospects

for

the

second

half

of

2023vCrude

Oil

Price

MovementsCrudespotprices11356The

oilfuturesmarketThe

futuresmarketstructureCrudespreadsCommodity

Markets779Trendsinselectedcommodity

marketsInvestmentflowsintocommoditiesWorld

Economy10121726OECDNon-OECDThe

impactof

theUSdollar

(USD)andinflationon

oilpricesWorld

Oil

DemandOECD272831Non-OECDWorld

Oil

SupplyOECD363845484950Non-OECDOPEC

NGLsandnon-conventionaloilsOPECcrudeoilproductionWorldoilsupplyProduct

Markets

and

RefineryOperationsRefinery

margins51515253Refinery

operationsProductmarketsTanker

Market5858585960Spot

fixturesSailingsandarrivalsDirty

tankerfreightratesCleantankerfreightratesOPEC

MonthlyOilMarketReport–June

2023viiTableof

ContentsCrude

and

Refined

Products

Trade61616263646465USChinaIndiaJapanOECD

EuropeEurasiaCommercial

Stock

Movements676768697071OECDUSJapanEU-14plusUKand

NorwaySingapore,Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp(ARA)andFujairahBalance

of

Supply

and

Demand727273Balanceof

supply

anddemandin

2022Balanceof

supply

anddemandin

2023Appendix74Glossary

of

TermsAbbreviationsAcronyms808080viiiOPEC

MonthlyOilMarketReport–June

2023Crude

Oil

Price

MovementsCrude

Oil

Price

MovementsThe

OPEC

Reference

Basket

(ORB)

value

declined

in

May,

dropping

by

$8.31/b,

or

9.9%,

to

stand

at$75.82/b.

All

ORB

component

values

declined

alongside

their

respective

crude

oil

benchmarks,

whichlargely

offsetarisein

most

officialsellingprices

in

allregions.Crude

oil

futures

prices

extended

their

losses

in

May

experiencing

a

heavy

selloff.

Market

sentimentweakened

due

to

renewed

worries

about

an

economic

slowdown

and

re-emerging

US

banking

sectorconcerns.

Investor

sentiment

also

came

under

additional

pressure

after

the

US

Federal

Reserve

increasedits

key

interest

rate

again.

Selloffs

from

hedge

funds

and

other

money

managers

cutnet

longpositions

byabout120mb,fuellingthepricedecline.On

a

monthly

average,

the

ICE

Brent

front-month

contract

fell

by

$7.67,

or

9.2%,

to

stand

at

$75.69/b

inMay.

The

NYMEX

WTI

front-monthcontractfellby

$7.82,

or9.8%,toan

average

of

$71.62/b.

DME

Omancrudeoilfuturespricesfellm-o-m

by

$8.70,or10.4%,tosettleat

$74.78/b.Hedge

funds

and

other

money

managers

heavily

cut

their

bullish

positions

in

May

after

they

were

net

buyersthe

previous

month.

This

fuelled

price

volatility

and

contributed

to

a

drop

in

futures

prices.

Money

managersturned

bearish

on

the

outlook

for

crude

oil

prices

and

rushed

toclose

long

positions

that

had

been

built

inApril,

amid

weakness

in

the

broader

financial

market

and

uncertaintyabout

the

US

debt

ceiling

talks,

witha

deal

agreed

in

early

June,

and

subdued

Chinese

economic

data

that

weighed

on

investor

sentiment.

Overthe

month,

money

managers

cut

their

futures

and

options

net

long

positions

by

23,245

lots,

between

theweeksof

2and30

May,or

7.9%of

thetotalnet

longpositions.The

front

end

of

major

futures

contracts

ICE

Brent,

NYMEX

WTI

and

DME

Oman

weakened

in

Maycompared

with

April,

signalling

a

deteriorating

economic

and

oil

demand

outlook.

However,

pricebenchmarks

remained

in

backwardation

for

most

of

the

month.

Selling

pressure

was

more

pronounced

inthenearestfuturescontractscomparedtoforwardscontracts.The

premium

of

light

sweet

to

medium

sour

crudes

in

all

major

regions

continued

to

narrow

in

May.

Thiswas

amid

weaker

light

sweet

crude

market

fundamentals

and

a

narrower

spread

between

light/mediumdistillates

and

heavy

distillate

product

margins,

such

as

the

diesel/gasoil-HSFO

spread.

A

well-suppliedlight

sweet

crude

market

and

high

US

crude

exports

weighed

on

the

value

of

light

sweet

crudes.

Meanwhile,strongerHSFOmarginsthathaverisenforseveralmonthsaddedsupporttoheavy

sourcrudes.Crude

spot

pricesCrude

spot

prices

fell

sharply

in

May

erasing

all

of

Graph

1

-

1:

Crude

oil

price

movementsthe

previousmonth’sgains,withthe

North

Sea

Datedbenchmark

dropping

the

most.

On

average,

it

wasnearly

11%

lower

m-o-m.

Selloffs

in

futures

markets,US$/b140high

crudeoil

supply

availability

in

NorthwestEurope,

120an

uncertain

demand

outlook

and

mixed

refining100marginsweighedonthevalueof

NorthSeaDated.Softbuyinginterestfrom

severalAsianbuyers

duetorefinery

turnarounds

weighed

on

spot

prices.

Dieselmargins

continued

to

decline

for

several

weeks,specifically

in

Asia,

which

also

contributed

toweakeningoilprices.8060OPECBasketNorthSeaDatedWTISources:Argus,OPECand

Platts.Despitetheoverallbearishsentiment,

however,

some

factors

providedsupporttospot

prices.A

largedropinUScrude

oilstocks

in

the

week

of

16

Mayprovidedsomerelief

to

themarket.Additionally,renewed

demandfrom

French

refiners

and

a

wildfire

outbreak

in

Canada,

which

reduced

exports

to

the

US,

contributed

to

puttingafloorunderspotprices.The

value

of

the

phys

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