OPEC+'s August output hike and potential Iranian supply resumption collide with China's tepid demand, threatening a deeper crude glut.
OPEC+'s August output hike and potential Iranian supply resumption collide with China's tepid demand, threatening a deeper crude glut.

OPEC+'s August output hike and potential Iranian supply resumption collide with China's tepid demand, threatening a deeper crude glut.
OPEC+ will add 188,000 barrels a day to its output target from August, the seventh consecutive monthly increase, even as Iran prepares to clear crude inventories following a potential sanctions relief and China's top importer shows little appetite for additional purchases.
"The near-term focus will remain on how many tankers will manage to cross the Strait of Hormuz and how quickly demand and Chinese crude imports recover," said Giovanni Staunovo, an analyst at UBS.
Brent crude traded near $72 a barrel on Friday, down from peaks above $120 after the U.S.-Israeli attack on Iran on Feb. 28 and back to pre-conflict levels. OPEC+ output slumped to 33.13 million bpd in May from 42.77 million bpd in February as the Strait of Hormuz closure choked exports from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Iraq. June saw a partial recovery after U.S.-led efforts helped the UAE and other producers reroute shipments, but production remains well below pre-war levels.
The combination of returning OPEC+ supply and potential Iranian barrels threatens to deepen a glut just as China — the world's largest crude importer — slows purchases. The seven core members have about 379,000 bpd of cuts left to unwind, implying full restoration by September if the monthly pace holds. Their next meeting is Aug. 2.
The August increase extends the phased rollback of the 1.65 million bpd voluntary cut agreed in April 2023, before the UAE exited the alliance in late April to escape production restraints. The seven remaining participants — Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Algeria and Oman — have now restored almost 800,000 bpd since April, though much of that increase existed only on paper while Hormuz remained effectively closed.
Iran's potential return adds another layer of supply risk. Tehran has accumulated significant crude inventories during the sanctions period, and a normalization of exports could release those barrels into a market already absorbing higher OPEC+ output. Yet China, historically Iran's primary customer, has not shown enthusiasm for increasing crude purchases, according to trading sources. The country's refining margins have narrowed because of weak domestic fuel demand, reducing the incentive to buy even discounted Iranian grades.
The last time OPEC+ faced a similar confluence of returning supply and tepid demand was in mid-2020, when the group's production cuts failed to prevent Brent from hovering near $40 for months until consumption recovered. This time, the IEA's record coordinated strategic stock release — deployed during the Hormuz crisis — has added further supply cushion, keeping prices anchored near $72 even as physical disruptions persist.
For oil-exporting nations, the revenue implications are significant. Brent at $72 is below the fiscal breakeven price for most OPEC+ members — Saudi Arabia needs roughly $85 a barrel to balance its budget, according to IMF estimates. Every sustained $5 decline below that level widens the kingdom's fiscal deficit by about $15 billion annually.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.