Key Takeaways
Seven OPEC+ members have agreed in principle to increase June production targets by approximately 188,000 barrels per day, similar to May's 206,000 BPD increase excluding the UAE's shareThe production increase is described as largely symbolic given the Strait of Hormuz disruption has caused far greater supply disruption than any OPEC quota adjustment can offsetPolymarket prices a 75% probability of WTI crude hitting $110 in May, a 45% chance of $120, and a 22% chance of $130, per PolyBeats dataThe UAE's withdrawal from OPEC and OPEC+ effective May 1 has not derailed the remaining members' decision-making process, which is proceeding on a "business as usual" basisAn online OPEC+ meeting among the seven remaining members is planned for Sunday
Seven OPEC+ members have reached an agreement in principle to raise their collective oil production target by approximately 188,000 barrels per day in June, sources told BlockBeats on May 2 -- but the decision is being widely characterized as symbolic given that the real driver of global oil supply disruption lies far beyond OPEC's control.
The planned June increase mirrors May's adjustment of 206,000 BPD when accounting for the UAE's now-departed share, signaling that the remaining OPEC+ core is pressing ahead with its established production roadmap despite the bloc's most significant membership rupture in years. The seven remaining members plan to formalize the decision in an online meeting on Sunday.
A Largely Symbolic Move
The production increase does little to address the dominant force reshaping global oil markets. The ongoing US-Israel conflict with Iran has disrupted the majority of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz -- a chokepoint through which approximately 20% of global oil supply transits -- causing supply dislocations far larger in scale than any incremental quota adjustment OPEC+ could realistically implement. In that context, 188,000 additional barrels per day represents a marginal offset to a structural supply shock measured in millions of barrels.
The UAE's exit from OPEC effective May 1 adds further complexity. Abu Dhabi is now free to set its own production levels independently, potentially adding supply outside the cartel's coordination framework -- a dynamic that could accelerate the erosion of OPEC+'s relevance as a price-setting mechanism, as Nordea Bank analyst Jan von Gerich warned following the UAE's withdrawal announcement.
Markets Price Significant Further Oil Upside
Despite the symbolic nature of the production increase, prediction market data suggests traders expect oil prices to move materially higher before the end of May. According to PolyBeats data from Polymarket, the probability of WTI crude hitting $110 on a single day this month stands at 75%, while the probability of reaching $120 is priced at 45% and $130 at 22% -- a distribution that reflects persistent uncertainty around the Hormuz situation and the risk of further military escalation.
With WTI currently trading around $102 per barrel following Friday's ceasefire proposal-driven pullback, a move to $110 would represent an approximately 8% increase from current levels -- a threshold the market views as more likely than not before June.
Crypto and Macro Implications
For Bitcoin and risk assets, the combination of a symbolic OPEC+ increase and elevated Polymarket oil price probabilities reinforces the inflationary headwind that has been capping risk appetite through April and into May. A sustained move toward $110--$120 WTI would keep inflation expectations elevated, reduce the probability of Fed rate cuts further into the distance, and maintain the higher-for-longer monetary policy backdrop that has been one of the primary constraints on Bitcoin's ability to break decisively above $79,000--$80,000.