People Are Talking About Contango While Oil Markets Are Far From Recovered
People Are Talking About Contango While Oil Markets Are Far From Recovered.
While financial desks obsess over paper structures and Brent crude briefly flirted with contango, the broader market is missing the forest for the trees. Brent crude 's recent rebound from $71 to $79 a barrel is not merely a brief short-covering bounce; it is the first tremor of an underlying structural deficit. The financial side of the market has become completely decoupled from a complex, fragmenting physical reality. The real story isn't a long-term supply glut—it is an artificial, short-term distortion masking critically low inventories and a massive return of Chinese demand.
What factors suggest oil market tightening despite contango structure?
Why is Iranian floating storage clearing impacting oil prices?
For months, bearish sentiment on Brent crude reached historically crowded levels. Managed-money short positions recently climbed above 40% of total speculative interest—the third-highest reading in 15 years. This extreme net-short positioning left the commodity highly sensitive to geopolitical headlines.
Saxo Bank's Ole Hansen notes that managed money accounts continued to reduce bullish Brent crude bets in the week to 30 June, cutting the net long by 38% to near a historic low of just 55.6k contracts, down around 87% from a March peak of 429k. With the gross short hovering near an all-time high at 226k… pic.twitter.com/TB6PEt3TmC
When hostilities in the Middle East flared again, threatening a fresh round of back-and-forth military strikes between the U.S. and Iran, the spark hit the powder keg. The ensuing liquidation and short-covering rush propelled Brent back to the $78–$80 range. Yet macro traders continue to interpret this bounce as a temporary geopolitical premium, pointing to recent front-month weakness as evidence of a structural oversupply. They might be misreading the fundamentals.
To understand why the market looks oversupplied on paper, one must look at China's unprecedented behavioral shift following the Strait of Hormuz closure in early March. In a move that blindsided global markets, Beijing quietly banned domestic exports of refined petroleum products and drastically slashed its foreign crude purchases. By taking the world's largest buyer off the market overnight, China effectively neutralized the supply shock from the shuttered strait, artificially keeping a lid on crude prices.
Related: U.S. Oil Dominance Keeps Growing Despite Lower Prices
That demand freeze has officially thawed. Beijing has lifted its prohibition on fuel exports, opening the floodgates for independent refiners to resume global sales of gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel. According to Reuters, a division of Rongsheng Petrochemical—one of China's largest independent refining giants—has received a rare export permit. Across the sector, licensed refineries are projected to export roughly three million tonnes of refined fuel this month alone.
To capture these export margins, Chinese refiners must urgently buy crude. Data from Argus reveals that Chinese buyers have already secured 26 million barrels for July and August delivery from GCC producers. This buying spree is driven by a critical need to refill domestic stockpiles that were heavily depleted during the Hormuz shutdown.
The easing of physical supply constraints was further reinforced by an unprecedented diplomatic opening. According to S&P Global Commodities , floating storage of crude and condensate in East Asian waters plunged from 49.02 million barrels in May 2026 to 24.45 million barrels by the end of June—a decline of roughly 50%—as a large overhang of Iranian crude that had accumulated since late 2025 was rapidly absorbed by the market. The drawdown was driven by the 60-day U.S. general sanctions waiver introduced alongside the mid-June peace framework, which temporarily removed many of the logistical barriers to seaborne Iranian oil exports. As a broader pool of international buyers regained the ability to finance, insure, and receive these previously stranded cargoes, the deep discounts that had long attracted China's independent "teapot" refiners quickly disappeared.
Superficial market analysis suggests that the weakening of Asian spot markets and a drop in Saudi Official Selling Prices (OSPs) indicate a structural supply glut. In reality, this short-term abundance is a localized mirage caused by a wave of extra spot barrels hitting the market simultaneously as floating storage cleared, stacking on top of pre-existing term supply contracts.
The physical oil market was undeniably oversupplied by nearly 2 million barrels per day at the start of 2026. However, the subsequent war in Iran, a massive global inventory draw of over 1 billion barrels, and ongoing transit restrictions through the Strait of Hormuz have permanently altered the baseline.
The brief window of physical liquidity is already slamming shut:
The 60-day U.S. administrative waiver on Iranian barrels has officially been canceled , abruptly cutting off the legal flow of these barrels and reinstating strict maritime enforcement.
Global diesel markets are tightening further due to Russia's ban on foreign fuel sales—a direct result of highly effective Ukrainian drone strikes on domestic Russian refining infrastructure, which cut Russian diesel exports in half year-over-year. Increased Chinese diesel exports will merely act as a necessary offset to this massive structural deficit, rather than oversupplying the market.
The contango structure we've briefly seen in Brent futures was a fleeting technical distortion born from a unique, temporary intersection of a 60-day U.S. sanctions waiver, a rapid clearing of floating inventory, and discounted prompt-loading allocations from Saudi Arabia.
Now that the Iranian waiver is gone, hostilities around Hormuz are escalating, and China's mega-refiners are aggressively buying to support a massive 3-million-tonne fuel export push, the physical market is set to tighten violently. Global inventories are sitting at multi-year lows, and refined fuel markets are fundamentally undersupplied . Investors trading the paper contango are positioned for a supply glut that has already ceased to exist.

