Ukraine Drone Strikes Are Tightening Russian Supply
The biggest catalyst this week? Ukraine’s drone attacks on Russia’s refining infrastructure. These hits have been stacking up, and traders are starting to price in meaningful supply disruptions. Russia’s already responding — announcing a fresh diesel export ban and extending its existing gasoline ban through year-end.
Add to that, the refining outages are creating localized fuel shortages in parts of Russia. That’s raising eyebrows for global supply desks. Any long-term hit to Russian product exports would be a bullish input — especially if China and India start dialing back their purchases under U.S. pressure, which some expect following comments from President Trump and other Western allies.
ANZ analysts are even flagging possible new sanctions after NATO warned Moscow about further airspace violations. Geopolitical premium, anyone?
Kurdistan’s Crude Is Coming Back Online — Sort Of
But wait — there’s a supply counterweight coming into play. Crude exports from Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region are set to restart this weekend through the Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline after an 18-month pause. If all goes according to plan, we’re talking about 180,000–190,000 barrels per day flowing into the market.
That said, this isn’t an all-clear. Norway’s DNO — one of the major producers — said it won’t ship just yet, citing unresolved payment issues. So while some barrels may flow, the full restart might take time. And that gives bulls some breathing room.
Strong U.S. Data Adds Fuel — But Could It Spook the Fed?
On the demand side, U.S. GDP just got revised up to 3.8% annualized. That’s solid. If you’re trading demand proxies, that’s your green light. But here’s the twist — stronger growth could keep the Fed cautious. After a 25-basis-point cut last week, markets were hoping for a dovish tilt. This latest data might delay that.