# With Hormuz reopening, OPEC+ moves to make its paper quotas real
> The eight unwinders set a 5 July decision for August output as the ceasefire restores deliverability; Brent flipped to contango at $69 on June 25, signalling the war premium is gone

**Meta:** type: event · date: 2026-06-18 · heads: Whose Money, The Quiet Shift · 10 takes · 1 lenses · 4 regions

## Summary

For three months the [OPEC+](/ko/entity/opec) unwind was a paper exercise: the eight voluntary-cut
members raised quotas monthly while the [closed Strait of Hormuz](/ko/n/hormuz-oil-supply-shock)
kept the extra barrels stranded. From March through June, four consecutive hikes, each
between 188,000 and 206,000 bpd, were "symbolic" in the words of Al Jazeera because no
tanker could clear the strait. The [June 17 ceasefire](/ko/n/iran-us-ceasefire-mou) changes
that. With Hormuz reopening, the 5 July review becomes the first decision where added quota
translates into real exports, and Gulf producers, led by [Saudi Arabia](/ko/entity/saudi-arabia) and the
[United Arab Emirates](/ko/entity/united-arab-emirates), are positioning to restore shut-in capacity. The market has
already answered: on June 25, Brent dropped to $69.42 and the futures curve [[brent-crude-
contango-jun25|flipped to contango]] for the first time since before the conflict, confirming
the war premium is gone. At SPIEF on June 4, Saudi Energy Minister Abdulaziz bin Salman
said [Saudi Arabia](/ko/entity/saudi-arabia) "will remain a resilient energy supplier under all circumstances" and
that "the world needs every molecule of energy." The group has been unwinding 2.2m bpd of
April-2023 cuts; in the pre-war pattern it repeatedly exceeded the original ~137,000 bpd
cadence. The question is pace: 5 July decides August.

## The split

[Saudi Arabia](/ko/entity/saudi-arabia) and [Russia](/ko/entity/russia) are choosing volume and market share over price defence,
accepting sub-$70 crude to discipline higher-cost rivals and reclaim demand ceded during
the Hormuz disruption. The [[$80 Goldman Q4 floor forecast has given way to $65 budget
breakevens for several producers, who need price recovery but see market share as the
longer game. UAE's exit from OPEC effective May 1 removes the most price-hawkish voice and
leaves Riyadh with more latitude to push hikes. IEA June 2026 sees 2026 demand down
1.1 mb/d; OPEC's own forecast is +970 kb/d, a 2 mb/d gap that will not close at the 5
July meeting.

## By the numbers

- 4, consecutive monthly hikes from March through June (206K, 206K, 188K, 188K bpd).
- 2.2m bpd, the April-2023 voluntary cut still being unwound.
- 5 July 2026, next review; August output decision.
- $69.42, Brent June 25, 2026, contango confirmed.
- ~$65, budget breakeven for several OPEC+ producers.
- May 1, UAE exit from OPEC, removing a price-hawkish voice.

## Why it matters

The 5 July decision is the first that actually moves physical barrels. If the group
accelerates the unwind into a contango market, Brent faces sustained pressure toward the
$65 budget floor that strains [Saudi Arabia's fiscal position](/ko/n/saudi-q1-record-deficit) and
broader Gulf budgets. If they pause, higher-cost producers gain breathing room but market
share reverts. Either way, the era of war-premium crude ends here.

## What to watch

- The 5 July August output figure and whether the group accelerates, holds or pauses.
- How quickly Saudi and UAE shut-in capacity actually ramps versus compliance schedules.
- Whether Brent holds above the $65 budget-breakeven floor or tests it.
- IEA versus OPEC demand forecast divergence closing or widening through Q3.

## Regional takes (batched by bias / lens)

### unlabelled
- **OPEC, Press Releases** (Austria, en) — The cartel's official press-release index, the authoritative record for the eight voluntary-cut members' monthly output decisions and the date/figure for the August adjustment set at the 5 July review.
  Source: https://www.opec.org/press-releases.html
- **Argus Media** (United Kingdom, en) — Specialist energy price-reporting agency tracks the mechanics of the unwind and the new baseline-setting mechanism, the technical read on how quota math, not headlines, governs the pace of returning barrels. Argus pricing underpins much physical trade.
  > "OPEC+ agrees a mechanism to set new production baselines, governing the pace of the unwind."
  Source: https://www.argusmedia.com/en/news-and-insights/latest-market-news/2760072-opec-agrees-mechanism-to-set-new-production-baselines
- **Bloomberg** (United States, en) — Reports Gulf producers gearing up to restore shut-in output as Hormuz reopens, the supply-side read that the war's notional quota hikes are about to become deliverable, with Saudi and UAE positioning to ramp first into a softer market.
  > "Saudi Arabia and UAE oil producers gear up for the Strait of Hormuz reopening."
  Source: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-06-18/saudi-arabia-uae-oil-producers-gear-up-for-strait-of-hormuz-reopening
- **CNBC** (United States, en) — 
  Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/03/opec-announces-188000-barrels-per-day-output-increase-.html
- **Energy Intelligence** (United States, en) — 
  Source: https://www.energyintel.com/00000197-3d9e-dd1d-ab9f-ffdf16090000
- **Trading Economics (OPEC calendar)** (United States, en) — 
  Source: https://tradingeconomics.com/opec/calendar
- **Fortune** (United States, en) — 
  Source: https://fortune.com/2026/03/01/opec-oil-output-increase-saudi-arabia-russia-iran-conflict-crude-prices/
- **Reuters** (United Kingdom, en) — 
  Source: https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/
- **The National** (United Arab Emirates, en) — 
  Source: https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/energy/
- **Rigzone** (United States, en) — 
  Source: https://www.rigzone.com/news/

## Across the graph
- Related: [[opec-plus-july-output]], [[brent-crude-contango-jun25]], [[hormuz-oil-supply-shock]], [[dubai-osp-asia-demand-2026]]
- Entities: OPEC, Saudi Arabia, Russia, United Arab Emirates

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Canonical: https://rbtfl.xyz/ko/n/opec-plus-august-acceleration