Letter from the US: Refiners are no longer mere price takers
OPEC watchers should not undervalue the buying power of refiners in the changing oil market equation
Those who write or talk about oil markets tend to think of refiners as lemmings. Almost every analysis ties crude price changes to shifts in global supply and demand. Forecasters expect prices to rise if more oil is consumed than produced and fall if supply exceeds demand. In their models, the analysts see refiners as price takers, that is, the ‘lemmings’, those that exhibit herd mentality and commit mass suicide. In this case, refiners hypothetically accept en masse whatever crude prices and volumes the producers offer up. The real lemmings, however, are the analysts, reporters and commentators who focus on barrel counting. Their assessments of market conditions rarely diverge. Refiners and
Also in this section
17 February 2026
The 25th WPC Energy Congress, taking place in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia from 26–30 April 2026, will bring together leaders from the political, industrial, financial and technology sectors under the unifying theme “Pathways to an Energy Future for All”
17 February 2026
Siemens Energy has been active in the Kingdom for nearly a century, evolving over that time from a project-based foreign supplier to a locally operating multi-national company with its own domestic supply chain and workforce
17 February 2026
Eni’s chief operating officer for global natural resources, Guido Brusco, takes stock of the company’s key achievements over the past year, and what differentiates its strategy from those of its peers in the LNG sector and beyond
16 February 2026
As the third wave of global LNG arrives, Wood Mackenzie’s director for Europe gas and LNG, Tom Marzec-Manser, discusses with Petroleum Economist the outlook for Europe’s gas market in 2026






