JUL · ISSUE 28 · July 7, 2026
ENERGYOil is deflating, and this time it isn't fear
Ships are leaving Hormuz after 100 days, China is buying 25% less, and Aramco is cutting prices like it hasn't since 1999.
BRENT
$68.66
well below $85
ARAMCO TO ASIA
price cut
1st time in 26 years
DOWNSIDE CASE
$40
already being cited
THE NUMBER
$68.66
↓ back to pre-conflict levels
Brent trades below $69, far from the $126 peak it hit during Middle East tension. OPEC+ is raising output (+188k barrels/day in August) just as demand softens.
THE DATA
ZOOM IN-46%
-46%
▼ from the April high ($126 → $68.66)
It's the difference between a $90 tank and a $50 one. Cheap oil is a quiet tax cut for the consumer.
From the $126 peak to today's $68.66, Brent has almost halved. That drop feeds straight into gasoline and the grocery basket.
- DISINFLATION
- — Inflation still exists but slows down, so prices rise less.
- SUPPLY SHOCK
- — A price move driven by how much is produced, not by demand.
QUOTE
CONTEXTOPEC is fighting to survive
“When a cartel cuts prices instead of cutting output, it isn't managing the market: it's fighting not to lose its share.”
Raising output into weak demand defends market share, not revenue. It's a price war in disguise.
- MARKET SHARE
- — The slice of the market a producer controls.
- PRICE WAR
- — Cutting prices to push out rivals even if it hurts short term.
TREND
12 MONTHSFrom war spike to oversupply
The geopolitical scare lasted weeks. Oversupply has been winning for months.
12 months of Brent. April's peak was geopolitical fear; today's fall is pure supply.
- GEOPOLITICAL PREMIUM
- — The extra price oil carries for conflict risk.
- BARREL
- — The standard oil unit: 159 liters.
TWO FORCES
SUPPLY VS DEMANDWhy oil is falling: not just one reason
TOO MUCH SUPPLY
The producer side
- OPEC+ is raising output +188k barrels/day in August.
- Ships are leaving Hormuz after 100 days of tension.
- Aramco is cutting prices to Asia for the first time in 26 years.
TOO LITTLE DEMAND
The consumer side
- China is buying 25% less and hasn't recovered.
- The global economy grows slowly and burns less energy.
- With no active conflict, precautionary buying disappears.
The price drops because there's too much supply AND too little demand at the same time. Both push the same way.
- DEMAND
- — How much oil the world wants to buy at each price.
- INVENTORIES
- — Stored reserves: if they rise, there's a glut.
IMPACT
WHO WINSWho feels cheaper oil (illustrative example)
Cheap oil is a transfer: from the producer to the consumer and to price stability.
Rough split of where low oil brings relief. Figures are illustrative to explain the idea, not an exact measurement.
- CPI
- — Consumer Price Index: measures the inflation you actually pay.
- MARGIN
- — The gap between what a barrel costs to produce and its sale price.
WATCHLIST
5 KEY ETFsFive assets that move with crude
| XLE | 84.10 | ▼ -1.6% | US oil majors. They lose revenue when the barrel drops. |
| USO | 62.40 | ▼ -2.3% | Tracks the crude price directly. Mirrors the fall. |
| JETS | 24.80 | ▲ +1.1% | Airlines. Cheap fuel is their biggest cost relief. |
| TIP | 108.20 | ▼ -0.3% | Inflation-linked bonds. Less appealing if energy cools the CPI. |
| SPY | 753.00 | ▲ +0.7% | The broad index. Cheap oil supports the rally via inflation. |
Oil never falls alone. It drags energy, airlines and inflation. Each ticker tells one side of the story.
- ETF
- — A listed basket that tracks an index or sector.
- TIPS
- — US Treasury bonds linked to inflation.
WRAP-UP
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- BRENT
- — The world benchmark for the price of oil.
- DISINFLATION
- — Prices still rise, but more slowly.