Oil Price Support: From Saudi Arabia to China

Deep News
2025/10/02

Is China taking over from Saudi Arabia as the new oil price "stabilizer" in the crude oil market?

Despite global demand growth remaining subdued, OPEC+ unexpectedly decided to rapidly restore production in April this year, catching the market off guard. Analysts predict the organization may even consider further production increases at this weekend's meeting.

However, after initial volatility, the crude oil market has demonstrated relative resilience. According to media reports, the underlying reason lies in the intervention of another key player: China.

Analysts believe that China is purchasing large quantities of crude oil to fill its strategic reserves, and this absorbed excess oil is typically not included in globally trackable commercial inventories, thus not reflected in international oil prices.

This means that despite China, as a major consumer, naturally favoring lower oil prices, its current reserve-building behavior is more supportive of the market than Saudi Arabia's actions.

The Failure of the "Saudi Put Option" and China's New Role

For years, oil traders have spoken of a "Saudi put option" - similar to the "Fed put option" familiar to equity investors. This refers to the market's belief that if oil prices fall too sharply, Saudi Arabia and its OPEC partners would intervene through production cuts to support prices.

This belief has been validated repeatedly in recent years, with the most notable example being the historic agreement to cut production by 10 million barrels per day during the worst of the 2020 pandemic, led by Saudi Arabia.

However, according to media analysis, this so-called "market rescue mechanism" has largely failed this year. Saudi Arabia's decision to push for increased production in April completely ignored slowing global demand, potential trade threats, and substantial new supply additions from the Americas.

As Saudi Arabia abandons its traditional role, China has assumed responsibility for market stability - by continuously absorbing cheap crude oil to fill its Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

Since crude oil used for strategic reserves typically does not enter "visible inventories" such as storage tanks in Western consuming nations, international oil price benchmarks cannot fully reflect this portion of diverted supply. This excess oil supply, while objectively present, appears to have vanished from the market in pricing terms.

The result is that China, as the world's largest crude oil buyer, currently provides more price support than oil producer Saudi Arabia.

Currently, Wall Street widely predicts that the global crude oil market will experience severe supply surpluses from the fourth quarter of this year through 2026. However, traders believe that as long as these excess barrels continue flowing into China's strategic reserve facilities, the supply surplus may not matter in terms of pricing, as the market's key risk point has shifted.

Analysis indicates that the core future issue is that if China's willingness to stockpile crude oil weakens, the global oil market could face a "painful reckoning." At that point, the temporarily hidden supply surplus problem will be fully exposed, bringing enormous downward pressure on oil prices.

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