---
title: "Refining margins hit a record as diesel scarcity outruns the oil price"
description: "The benchmark 3-2-1 crack spread reached about $70 a barrel this week, the highest on record, and margins have roughly tripled since the start of the year. The constraint is no longer crude oil but the capacity to turn it into diesel."
category: "Markets"
category_url: https://boursel.com/category/markets
author: "Olivia Chen"
published: 2026-07-19T01:52:00.000Z
updated: 2026-07-19T01:52:00.000Z
canonical: https://boursel.com/article/refining-margins-hit-a-record-as-diesel-scarcity-outruns-the-oil-price
tags: ["oil", "refining", "crack-spread", "diesel", "energy"]
---
# Refining margins hit a record as diesel scarcity outruns the oil price

The benchmark 3-2-1 crack spread reached about $70 a barrel this week, the highest on record, and margins have roughly tripled since the start of the year. The constraint is no longer crude oil but the capacity to turn it into diesel.

The most important number in energy markets right now is not the price of
crude. It is the gap between crude and the fuel made from it, and that gap has
never been wider.

The benchmark 3-2-1 crack spread rose to about $70 a barrel this week, the
highest level on record, [according to Bloomberg](https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-07-16/turning-oil-to-fuel-has-never-been-more-profitable-as-refining-margins-surge).
Refining margins have roughly tripled since the start of 2026.

## What a crack spread actually is

The term sounds like jargon but the idea is simple. A refinery buys crude oil
and sells the products it makes from it, principally gasoline and diesel. The
crack spread is the difference between what it pays and what it receives. The
name comes from "cracking," the process of breaking heavy hydrocarbons into
lighter, more valuable ones.

The industry standard benchmark is the 3-2-1 spread, which assumes three
barrels of crude produce two barrels of gasoline and one of distillate such as
diesel or jet fuel. These spreads are [traded as futures on the CME](https://www.cmegroup.com/education/articles-and-reports/introduction-to-crack-spreads),
which lets refiners lock in a margin in advance.

Two things follow from this. First, a refiner's profitability depends on the
spread, not the oil price: expensive crude is fine if fuel is proportionately
more expensive, and cheap crude is no help if fuel is cheap too. Second, the
crack spread is a gross margin, not a profit. It does not subtract the
considerable cost of running a refinery, so the record spread does not translate
one-for-one into record earnings.

## The bottleneck moved downstream

What makes this episode distinctive is where the scarcity sits.

In a conventional oil shock, crude is the constraint and the crude price does
the work. Here the constraint is refining: the ability to convert crude into
the specific products people need. When refining capacity is short relative to
demand for fuel, product prices rise faster than crude, and the spread widens.
That is a different problem with different consequences, and it is why the
crude price alone has been a poor guide to what drivers and hauliers are paying.

Several pressures have combined. The conflict involving Iran has disrupted
flows through the Gulf, which matters for refining specifically because Middle
Eastern grades are relatively rich in the middle distillates that make diesel
and jet fuel. Separately, Russia, which supplies roughly a tenth of the world's
diesel, has suspended exports, removing a large volume of finished product from
the market rather than crude.

Diesel is where the strain concentrates, and diesel is the fuel that moves
freight, powers farm equipment and runs generators. Gasoline shortages are
visible at the pump; diesel shortages propagate through the price of nearly
everything that travels by road.

## Thin inventories leave no cushion

The squeeze arrives with unusually little slack in the system. The US Energy
Information Administration, in an outlook published in March 2025, [projected
that combined inventories of motor gasoline, distillate fuel oil and jet fuel
would end 2026 at 375 million barrels](https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=64644),
which would be the lowest year-end level since 2000, when they finished at 358
million barrels. The agency attributed part of the decline to pending refinery
closures reducing US production of refined products.

That forecast predates the current disruption, which is the point: the market
was already expected to be tight before the supply shocks landed on top of it.
Inventories are what absorb a shock. With little to draw down, price does the
adjusting instead.

## Who gains and who pays

The gain accrues to refiners, and to complex refineries in particular, meaning
those able to process heavier or cheaper crude grades into high-value products.
Independent US refiners including Valero, Marathon Petroleum and Phillips 66 are
the most direct beneficiaries of wide distillate margins, though their reported
results for the current quarter are not yet published and the eventual figures
will depend on their individual crude slates, utilization and hedging.

The cost falls on everyone downstream. A wide crack spread is, definitionally,
a larger wedge between the oil price and the pump price, so households and
freight operators pay more even when crude is stable. For central banks
watching inflation, a diesel-led fuel increase is awkward, because it feeds
into goods prices broadly through transport costs rather than staying contained
in the energy component.

## A caution on extrapolating

Refining margins are among the more volatile and mean-reverting series in
commodities. Records tend to be made in conditions of acute scarcity, and those
conditions attract exactly the response that ends them: idle capacity restarts,
maintenance is deferred, cargoes are rerouted toward the best-paying market.

Whether that happens in months or quarters here depends on things nobody can
schedule, chiefly the course of the conflict and the restoration of damaged
refining capacity. What can be said with confidence is that a $70 crack spread
is not a normal state of the world, and that the market is currently paying an
extraordinary premium for the simple act of turning oil into fuel.

## Sources

- [Turning oil to fuel has never been more profitable as refining margins surge](https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-07-16/turning-oil-to-fuel-has-never-been-more-profitable-as-refining-margins-surge)
- [Introduction to crack spreads](https://www.cmegroup.com/education/articles-and-reports/introduction-to-crack-spreads)

