Crude is having a bad week — and diesel barely noticed.
Brent has fallen to about $72, its lowest since February, as Strait of Hormuz flows recover toward roughly 75% of pre-war levels; WTI is below $71. But diesel has not followed it down. The U.S. diesel crack spread — the refining margin between crude and diesel — hit a three-week high this week, and U.S. distillate inventories sit at about 106 million barrels, roughly 12 million below the five-year average and the tightest of any refined product (Reuters, EIA). Diesel is falling far less than crude because the scarcity is no longer in the barrel. It is in the fuel.
This is the clearest evidence of the rotation we set out in The Oil Crisis Is Moving Downstream: the crude panic is easing while the product crunch persists.
Why diesel is sticky
Three structural reasons:
- Diesel is refining-bound, not crude-bound. You cannot conjure diesel from a falling crude price — you need refinery capacity, the right configuration, and product logistics. Crude can flow again through Hormuz long before the world's refining and middle-distillate trade rebalances.
- The world has lost refining capacity at the worst time. Ukraine's drone campaign has knocked out an estimated 20%+ of Russia's refining capacity (eight of its ten biggest refineries hit), pushing Moscow toward a diesel export ban and even fuel imports (Bloomberg, RFE/RL). That removes product, not crude, from the global pool — and sanctions on Russian-refined fuel tighten the legal supply of middle distillates further.
- Diesel was already the thin one. Distillates entered this crisis below average and have stayed there; even as crude restocks, diesel is the last to rebuild.
Why it matters more than the crude headline
Diesel is the fuel of the real economy: trucking, farming, rail, mining, construction, shipping (via gasoil and bunkers) and emergency recovery. When diesel stays expensive while crude falls, the relief the oil-price chart promises does not reach the supply chain.
That is the mechanism behind our wider oil-to-food and infrastructure thesis: the fuel that moves goods and brings in harvests is the one staying tight. It also means inflation risk does not fade as fast as the crude price suggests — the cost that feeds through to food, freight and construction is the diesel cost, and it is sticky.
What it means for the UK
UK pump diesel is around 172.7p a litre — still some 19p above petrol, and that premium is exactly where the pain concentrates for hauliers, farmers, tradespeople, delivery firms and councils. Britain is structurally exposed: it has lost domestic refining capacity (Grangemouth) and leans heavily on imported product, and the full ban on diesel and jet fuel refined from Russian crude lands on 1 January 2027 — a clean-supply-chain goal that still has to survive contact with a tight middle-distillate market. For the UK, a falling Brent price is the headline; the diesel premium is the story that actually reaches the economy.
What to watch
- Diesel/gasoil crack spreads — the cleanest read on product tightness; still rising is the warning sign.
- Distillate inventory builds — until stocks rebuild toward the five-year average, the squeeze persists.
- Russian refinery outages — every strike removes product, not crude.
- Hormuz jet-fuel and middle-distillate flows — the lagging confirmation that products, not just crude, are moving again.
Sources: Reuters (U.S. diesel crack spread at a three-week high; refining economics firm despite the Iran truce); EIA Weekly Petroleum Status Report (distillate stocks ~106M barrels, ~12M below the five-year average, week ending 19 June); Bloomberg, RFE/RL and The Moscow Times (Russian refinery strikes, ~20%+ capacity offline, diesel-export-ban deliberations); DESNZ weekly road fuel prices (UK pump diesel). Brent via the dashboard (Stooq). Analysis, not financial advice.