Oil Prices Near $100 Amid Supply Fragility and Demand Uncertainty

June 3, 2026
Oil Prices Near $100 Amid Supply Fragility and Demand Uncertainty
  • Industry leaders warn that oil-flow normalization is unlikely before 2027, with expectations of only partial recovery of pre-conflict levels even under rapid resolution.

  • Rising aviation and airline route cuts as jet fuel costs surge are contributing to a downward revision of 2026 oil demand growth by about 1.3 million barrels per day.

  • Macro headwinds, such as weaker PMI data in China and the Eurozone, contrast with a relatively robust US manufacturing sector, underscoring uneven global demand dynamics.

  • Brent crude hovered near $100 a barrel in May 2026 after a roughly 16% decline, driven by optimism in diplomacy and notable demand destruction, signaling that underlying supply fragilities remain unresolved.

  • Asian demand weakness, led by a drop in Chinese seaborne imports, is a major drag on prices and demand, driven by strategic SPR use and high jet fuel costs.

  • Diplomatic stalemate over Iran’s uranium enrichment and sanctions limits potential supply relief, with only modest tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz and reduced idle capacity.

  • The Atlantic hurricane season poses a meaningful upside risk to prices due to reduced commercial reserves potentially amplifying disruptions to Gulf of Mexico infrastructure.

  • Global oil inventories and SPR releases have been drawn down, with ongoing declines into Q2 2026 and a reduced OPEC spare capacity around 2.5 mb/d expected in 2027.

Summary based on 1 source


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