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China’s Lower Oil Imports Weigh on Prices

Low Chinese Demand for Foreign Oil Keeping Prices Low

Dr. Jeffrey Roach | Chief Economist

Will Oil Prices Return to Pre-War Levels? It Depends on China’s Economic Growth

One of the key questions for investment professionals is whether oil prices will return to pre-war levels once the Middle East crisis is resolved. At the same time, many are asking why oil prices are not higher, especially since the latest geopolitical deal recently pushed crude to its lowest level since the initial attack. More than 100 days after the war in Iran disrupted the Strait of Hormuz, oil prices remain surprisingly contained, and one such reason could be China’s sharp pullback from the crude market. According to Vortexa data, Chinese crude imports by tanker fell to 6.7 million barrels a day last month, nearly 40% below the 2025 average1. That reduction — roughly 4 million barrels a day — is enormous, equal to the combined oil consumption of Germany and France. This could be the central factor keeping prices below $100 a barrel, as Beijing has somehow slashed imports without obvious economic damage other than a slowdown in year over year gross domestic product (GDP) from 5% in Q1 to 4.6% in Q2.

China Imported Surprisingly Less Oil Last Month

Line graph comparing refined petroleum products imports to crude petroleum oil imports from February 2018 to May 2026 for China.

Source: LPL Research, China General Administration of Customs 06/17/26
Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

Chinese retrenchment has helped offset what would normally be a major supply shock. Even with the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed, oil has continued to leave the Gulf through Saudi and UAE pipelines and tanker shuttle operations. At the same time, the market entered the conflict with a sizable surplus, strategic reserves are being released at a record pace, and global refinery runs have fallen as demand weakens, especially in petrochemicals.

China is the key variable. Some price-suppressing forces, such as emergency stock releases and inventory drawdowns, are temporary. The central question is how long Beijing can continue importing so little crude. If Chinese buying returns before supply risks ease, oil’s next move could look very different.

Other factors have also dampened the oil price response. Refineries are more flexible than in past crises, allowing them to adjust crude slates and product output. Production growth in the Americas, including Brazil, Guyana, the U.S. and China, has added supply. Meanwhile, traders have increasingly hedged geopolitical risk through options rather than physical oil purchases, and better satellite imagery and tanker tracking have reduced the fog of war.

But Do We Really Understand Tanker Activity?

It depends on how accurately we can track vessels.

The familiar model of maritime monitoring, the Automatic Identification System (AIS) signal, breaks down when geopolitics enter the picture. In places such as the Strait of Hormuz and the Red Sea, vessel movements help us assess crude flows and potential market disruptions. But that evidence can be incomplete, delayed, spoofed, or deliberately obscured.

The stakes are especially high in the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most important oil chokepoints. A tanker track through the strait may appear to be a simple line on a map, but in a crisis it becomes a market-sensitive claim about whether oil is moving, whether a cargo is stalled, whether a sanctioned ship transited, or whether traders should price in disruption.

Several categories of maritime risk now shape the operating environment. “Dark vessels” could disappear from normal visibility to conceal port calls, route changes, or ship-to-ship transfers. “Spoofing” involves false position signals that can make a vessel appear somewhere it is not. “Shadow fleets” describe opaque networks of vessels that move sanctioned commodities.

In contested waters, the vessel track is only valuable if it is to be trusted. For energy markets, false signals can quickly become false narratives about supply, disruption, or sanctions risk.

Concluding Thoughts

Ultimately, whether oil prices return to pre-war levels depends on both the formal resolution of the Middle East crisis and the durability of China’s demand slowdown. China’s unusually steep reduction in crude imports, as shown in the “China Imported Surprisingly Less Oil Last Month” chart, has absorbed a large share of the supply shock, but that cushion may prove temporary if economic activity reaccelerates, inventories are rebuilt, or Beijing resumes normal buying patterns. At the same time, today’s oil market is pricing not only barrels, but also information quality. Tanker flows, shadow-fleet activity, spoofed signals, and dark vessels can all distort the narrative around supply risk. For now, surplus inventories, strategic reserve releases, flexible refineries, hopeful political deals, and weaker Chinese demand have kept crude prices contained. But if China’s growth strengthens before geopolitical risks fully fade, and if vessel-tracking data becomes harder to trust, the market could quickly shift from complacency back toward scarcity pricing.

https://www.vortexa.com/insights/asia-crude-imports-rebound

Important Disclosures

This material is for general information only and is not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual. There is no assurance that the views or strategies discussed are suitable for all investors. To determine which investment(s) may be appropriate for you, please consult your financial professional prior to investing.

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This material was prepared by LPL Financial, LLC. All information is believed to be from reliable sources; however LPL Financial makes no representation as to its completeness or accuracy.

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