The Oct’25 Brent crude futures weakened from $67.30/bbl at 13.55 BST to $66.47/bbl at 16.41 BST before correcting slightly to $66.90/bbl by 17.36 BST (time of writing). US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin are expected to meet in the coming days, according to Kremlin adviser Yuri Ushakov. The meeting could take place as early as next week, with the location already decided but not yet disclosed. Iran maintained near-record oil exports in June, shipping around 1.8 mb/d, one of its strongest performances since 2018. Earlier reports from July had noted similar export volumes over recent months. The latest data confirms that Iran has managed to stabilise its crude oil shipments at these elevated levels. Montenegro has approved its 2025 plan to build mandatory oil reserves, aiming to stockpile 112,340 mt of oil products by mid-2026 to cover three months of supply. The hydrocarbons administration will handle 60% of this, while large importers will cover the rest. Due to funding and storage constraints, the government will only purchase 14,000–19,000 mt of diesel in 2025. China’s crude oil imports rose 11.5% year-on-year in July to 11.12 mb/d, driven by higher run rates from state refiners post-maintenance. However, imports fell 5.4% from June’s 12.14mb/d, when independent refiners stocked up on discounted sanctioned barrels. Refinery utilisation reached 71.84% in July, up from both June and the same period last year. Finally, the front (Oct/Nov) and 6-month (Oct/Apr) Brent futures spreads are at $0.56/bbl and $1.45/bbl, respectively.


