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Ahmed Mehdi
31 January 2022
Follow @PetroleumEcon
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Russia, Saudi Arabia and the US – what next for oil markets?

The impact of a breakdown in Russo-US relations is much more nuanced in liquids than in gas

All oil market eyes remain fixed on the US-Russia standoff over Ukraine, particularly given that current oil balances are on a knife edge and Opec+ spare capacity, expected to reach 2mn bl/d by mid-year, is the key balancing tool. The implications of any escalation for gas markets are clear, but for oil much depends on the shape of any sanctions. On the gas side, benchmark TTF contract prices would surge. And European buyers would have to pay a hefty premium to attract flexible LNG volumes from the US—where portfolio traders have destination flexibility—Qatar—which has a limited amount of spot volumes—and more far-flung destinations as distant as Australia. In crude and products markets, sho

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OPEC+ still showing restraint
11 June 2025
Petroleum Economist analysis shows OPEC bringing back some barrels in May, but fewer than expected, while OPEC+ continues to see output fall
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10 June 2025
The bloc may find it very difficult to replicate Japan’s approach due to fundamental differences in policy and the markets
Australia’s LNG flashpoint
10 June 2025
Scapegoating foreign buyers will not solve country’s gas shortages
Lower oil prices fuel US driving season
10 June 2025
US gasoline consumption is at its highest level since before COVID, but while stocks remain healthy, the hurricane season threatens

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