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
- Q2 2026 global oil demand forecast: 105.07 million bpd (mb/d) — down from 105.57 mb/d in the prior month's report (a 500,000 bpd reduction)
- Full-year 2026 demand growth forecast: Left unchanged at 1.4 mb/d — reflecting OPEC's view that China and India will drive demand in H2 2026 despite the Q2 contraction
- Q2 demand revision driver: \"Transitory economic weakness\" and \"logistical fallout from the intensifying conflict in the Middle East\"
- March 2026 total OPEC output decline: Staggering 7.9 mb/d decline in total output for March (per OPEC internal data cited in secondary sources)
- Saudi Arabian production (March): Fell to 7.8 mb/d
- Market context (April 13, 2026): Brent crude trading at $103.40/b; WTI at $105.63/b — triple digits despite the demand downgrade
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
- Brent: Surged past $100 to $103.40 on April 13 as the report was released
- Aviation sector: United Airlines shares cratered >30%; fuel cost spike cited as existential squeeze
- Energy equities: ExxonMobil hit record highs near $165; Chevron rose >25% year-to-date
- Winners: Upstream-heavy producers (Occidental Petroleum, etc.) most exposed to crude price movements
Comparison with Other Forecasts
| Institution | Q2 2026 Brent | Q2 Demand Growth Forecast |
|---|---|---|
| OPEC | — (no price forecast published in MOMR excerpt) | 105.07 mb/d (−500 kb/d from prior month) |
| IEA | Physical 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 peak | 1 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