date compiled: 2026-04-14

institution: Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)

type: intergovernmental-organization

description: OPEC's April 2026 report cut Q2 demand forecasts by 500 kb/d to 105.07 mb/d while documenting a 7.9 mb/d March output collapse — the gap between OPEC's demand optimism and supply reality framing the most contested numbers in the crisis.

source: https://www.opec.org/monthly-oil-market-report.html

source date: April 2026 (released April 13, 2026)

questions addressed: Q1, Q2


Related Articles

Q1 Supply Destruction · Q2 Price Impact · Synthesis


Key Data Points


The Paradox: Demand Downgrade + Price Surge

The April OPEC MOMR revealed a stark disconnect. Even as OPEC cut its Q2 demand forecast by 500,000 bpd, oil prices surged past $100/bbl — demonstrating that the physical supply disruption from the Hormuz conflict was overwhelming any demand destruction signal. The market was described as experiencing a \"supply shock\" where fear of the next barrel not arriving outweighed the reduced need for barrels.


Historical Context for Demand Contraction

The demand contraction in Q2 2026 follows a multi-decade pattern of OPEC demand forecasts proving too optimistic during major supply shocks. The cartel's decision to leave the full-year growth forecast at 1.4 mb/d (unchanged) while cutting Q2 by 500,000 bpd reflects a bifurcated view: temporary disruption in Q2, recovery in H2 2026 as the Middle East situation stabilizes.


Market Reaction


Comparison with Other Forecasts

InstitutionQ2 2026 BrentQ2 Demand Growth Forecast
OPEC— (no price forecast published in MOMR excerpt)105.07 mb/d (−500 kb/d from prior month)
IEAPhysical crude near $150/bbl−2.3 mb/d in April; −80 kb/d full-year
EIA$115/b peak Q2+0.6 mb/d full-year (cut from 1.2 mb/d)
OIES$116/b April peak1 mb/d full-year (down 260 kb/d)
Morgan Stanley$110/b Q2\"Slow recovery\"
Goldman Sachs$90 Q2 base

Key OPEC Contradiction to Note

OPEC cut Q2 demand by 500 kb/d but kept full-year growth unchanged at 1.4 mb/d — implying a sharp H2 2026 recovery. This contrasts with IEA's view of a full-year contraction (−80 kb/d). The divergence reflects fundamentally different assumptions about the speed and completeness of the post-ceasefire recovery.

Q1 Supply Destruction · Q2 Price Impact · Iea April 2026 · Oies Issue 52

Bibliography

OPEC-MOMR-April-2026.md