UAE SAYS IT QUITS OPEC AND OPEC+ -STATEMENT
— *Walter Bloomberg (@DeItaone) April 28, 2026
UAE SAYS IT WILL LEAVE OPEC AND OPEC+ AS OF MAY 1 - STATE NEWS AGENCY
Break up the cartel!! This could create quite the domino effect.
UAE SAYS IT QUITS OPEC AND OPEC+ -STATEMENT
— *Walter Bloomberg (@DeItaone) April 28, 2026
UAE SAYS IT WILL LEAVE OPEC AND OPEC+ AS OF MAY 1 - STATE NEWS AGENCY
“UAE quits OPEC” headlines while flows are already broken? Cute. The market isn’t tight because of quotas, it’s tight because barrels can’t move. https://t.co/Ep558rJWdM
— The Signal Quant (@thespeedsignal) April 28, 2026
Quote:
UAE Says Adios To OPEC!
Kenneth_2003 said:
One thing to keep in mind... We are just finally about to start seeing the actual supply impacts.
Taking into account transit times for a VLCC from the Persian Gulf to the US, the last pre-conflict departures are arriving now.
ABattJudd said:
The majority of UAE's shoreline borders the Persian Gulf, but they do have oil facilities on the Gulf of Oman as well. Shipping from there would allow them to bypass the Straight of Hormuz; I wonder if exiting OPEC will give them more freedom to adjust where they are loading up their oil for export.
I don't know squat about it; just spit-balling.
Big News
— Shiri_Sabra (@sabra_the) April 25, 2026
The King of Jordan has approved the lease of the Jordanian Port of Aqaba to the UAE for 30 years, in order to develop a railway line connecting the Emirates with Jordan and Israel, as part of the new India-UAE-Israel trade corridor (Port of Haifa). pic.twitter.com/DDjpyXkgDq
lead said:
So why did prices already surge?
rocky the dog said:Quote:
UAE Says Adios To OPEC!
They speak Spanish over there?
No Spin Ag said:
If this means cheaper prices at the pump, Allah be praised.
nortex97 said:ABattJudd said:
The majority of UAE's shoreline borders the Persian Gulf, but they do have oil facilities on the Gulf of Oman as well. Shipping from there would allow them to bypass the Straight of Hormuz; I wonder if exiting OPEC will give them more freedom to adjust where they are loading up their oil for export.
I don't know squat about it; just spit-balling.
They have been building some rail lines (freight) and now are going to put one through to Aqaba (I suspect they will work to build a pipeline alongside this project at some point.)
'Our friends' the Saudis are working on shifting long term toward pipelines in the red sea as well, fwiw.
flown-the-coop said:No Spin Ag said:
If this means cheaper prices at the pump, Allah be praised.
You should make stickers we can put on the gas pumps!
Fightin_Aggie said:rocky the dog said:Quote:
UAE Says Adios To OPEC!
They speak Spanish over there?
They speak money over there regardless if f language
Owlagdad said:Fightin_Aggie said:rocky the dog said:Quote:
UAE Says Adios To OPEC!
They speak Spanish over there?
They speak money over there regardless if f language
Guess "Shalom" would not be appropriate here?
LMCane said:
UAE will stand with the USA and Israel and hopefully ship as much oil as they are able to the rest of the world now
ABattJudd said:
The majority of UAE's shoreline borders the Arabian Gulf, but they do have oil facilities on the Gulf of Oman as well. Shipping from there would allow them to bypass the Straight of Hormuz; I wonder if exiting OPEC will give them more freedom to adjust where they are loading up their oil for export.
I don't know squat about it; just spit-balling.
lead said:
So why did prices already surge?
No Spin Ag said:flown-the-coop said:No Spin Ag said:
If this means cheaper prices at the pump, Allah be praised.
You should make stickers we can put on the gas pumps!
"Allah did that!"
On it.
Sims said:Kenneth_2003 said:
One thing to keep in mind... We are just finally about to start seeing the actual supply impacts.
Taking into account transit times for a VLCC from the Persian Gulf to the US, the last pre-conflict departures are arriving now.
To my knowledge, we only received 6 - 7 vlccs per month before the conflict and that was primarily to the west coast.
The gap is about 500k barrels per day and that is one of the targets of the SPR releases in addition to generally calming the market.
SPR can theoretically cover the west coast shortfall for 2+ years but since there is more release being done than just the shortfall, they're looking at about 4 months. Current release is scheduled to end mid July and that would leave the SPR at about 243M barrels, from 400+.
The problem is the SPR is primarily in the gulf and most of that is having to be transited to the west coast - that's the primary reason for the jones act waiver.
If the Iran conflict moves past mid June, then you'll either see demand destruction from higher prices ameloriate the price movements...or the prices will move higher and be tolerated. Supply/price issues are for Asia at this point, pricing issues for the US.
rocky the dog said:Quote:
UAE Says Adios To OPEC!
They speak Spanish over there?
rocky the dog said:Quote:
UAE Says Adios To OPEC!
They speak Spanish over there?
flakrat said:rocky the dog said:Quote:
UAE Says Adios To OPEC!
They speak Spanish over there?
No, but they just love to watch the Mexican soap operas for the quality Chica casting.
fullback44 said:flakrat said:rocky the dog said:Quote:
UAE Says Adios To OPEC!
They speak Spanish over there?
No, but they just love to watch the Mexican soap operas for the quality Chica casting.
They like the Telemundo chics !
lead said:
But the original contention was that we "…are just finally about to start seeing the actual supply impacts."
Not sure what this means, is the actual supply impact baked in already?
Kenneth_2003 said:
One thing to keep in mind... We are just finally about to start seeing the actual supply impacts.
Taking into account transit times for a VLCC from the Persian Gulf to the US, the last pre-conflict departures are arriving now.