Crude Oil Backwardation Deepens as Hormuz Risk and OPEC+ Politics Bite
WTI and Brent rally in steep backwardation as the Hormuz crisis and OPEC+ politics tighten nearby supply while the forward curve prices gradual normalization.
Prices & Curve Structure
Futures data as of 8 May 2026 show a pronounced and orderly backwardation in both NYMEX WTI and ICE Brent.
- Front WTI (Jun 2026) settled at USD 95.42/bbl, up 0.64% on the day, while Jul 2026 traded at USD 91.79/bbl, implying a strong front-end premium.
- Front Brent (Jul 2026) closed at USD 101.29/bbl (+1.21%), with Aug 2026 at USD 97.57/bbl, mirroring the steep nearby tightness.
- Beyond 2027, WTI prices gradually decline toward around USD 70/bbl, and into the early 2030s they fall further toward the low USD 60s, indicating that current war risk premia are not seen as permanent.
- Brent’s back end shows a similar shape, sliding from around USD 76–78/bbl in 2027 toward ~USD 71/bbl by 2031.
- ICE low-sulphur gasoil is even tighter: May 2026 traded near USD 1,192/t and Jun 2026 around USD 1,156/t, with values easing progressively toward ~USD 680–700/t by 2030–2031, but still elevated versus pre-crisis norms.
(EUR estimates assume an exchange rate of roughly 1.05 USD/EUR.)
Supply, Demand & Geopolitics
The dominant driver is the 2026 Strait of Hormuz crisis, which has created the largest disruption to world oil flows since the 1970s and triggered extreme monthly price swings. Brent spiked above USD 114/bbl and WTI above USD 106/bbl earlier in May as cease-fire hopes faded, before retreating to current levels.
OPEC+ has agreed modest quota hikes (~206 kb/d) for June, largely on paper while actual exports remain constrained by shipping disruptions. At the same time, the UAE’s formal exit from OPEC on 1 May undermines the cartel’s cohesion and raises the prospect of more independent supply responses in the medium term, even as Gulf producers signal continued commitment to market stability.
On the demand side, high prices are already eroding consumption: recent analysis suggests that elevated Brent and WTI levels have shaved roughly 1.7 mb/d off global demand growth this quarter versus previous expectations. The latest EIA weekly data show U.S. product supplied running firmly above pandemic-era lows but with signs of gasoline demand softness, consistent with a high-price drag and slower macro growth.
Fundamentals & Refining Margins
The alignment of a steeply backwardated crude curve with an even tighter gasoil structure underlines acute distillate tightness, especially in Europe and parts of Asia. Front-month gasoil gains of more than 4% on 8 May, compared with 0.6–1.2% moves in crude, point to strong middle distillate cracks and robust refinery incentive to run hard over the coming months.
Inventories in key consuming regions remain below five-year averages for middle distillates, while crude stocks have rebuilt modestly due to temporary demand destruction and logistical bottlenecks. As long as Hormuz exports are partially impaired and war risks remain elevated, the prompt market should stay tight, even if outright prices periodically correct on macro headlines or peace rumors.
Outlook & Key Risks
- Short term (next 1–3 months): Market balances remain extremely sensitive to any escalation or de-escalation around the Strait of Hormuz and to headline risk on peace talks. The base case is continued backwardation with WTI oscillating roughly in an EUR 80–95/bbl band and Brent in EUR 86–102/bbl.
- Medium term (2027–2029): The futures strip signals that additional non-OPEC supply, incremental OPEC+ volumes and weaker demand growth will bring prices back toward the EUR 70–80/bbl range, compressing cracks and easing gasoil tightness.
- Structural risks: Further OPEC fragmentation after the UAE exit, prolonged closure or damage to key Gulf export infrastructure, and policy shifts around strategic stockpiles could all reprice the back end higher.
Trading & Hedging Recommendations
- Consumers (refiners, airlines, logistics): Use price dips linked to peace headlines or macro scares to gradually extend coverage in nearby contracts where physical exposure is highest. Avoid over-hedging in the far-dated strip given significantly lower forward prices and the risk of normalization.
- Producers: Consider layering in hedges on the 2027–2029 part of the curve where prices remain well above long-run marginal cost, while preserving upside in the next 6–12 months via options, given geopolitical risk skew remains to the upside.
- Traders: The steep backwardation favors roll-yield strategies on the long side, but positioning must be nimble around conflict headlines. Relative value trades between crude and gasoil may offer opportunities if distillate cracks overshoot as refiners ramp up runs.
3-Day Directional Outlook (EUR terms)
- NYMEX WTI (front month): Mildly bullish bias; expect consolidation with spikes on any negative Hormuz or OPEC+ news, likely holding in the mid to high EUR 80s per barrel.
- ICE Brent (front month): Slightly firmer than WTI, with a broader EUR 90–98/bbl range as risk premium remains more concentrated in seaborne benchmarks.
- ICE Gasoil: Bullish; distillate-led strength should persist, with prices likely to test or slightly exceed recent highs in EUR terms if any further disruption to European or Middle Eastern refining/logistics emerges.