The article, "Oil’s Price Paradox," delves into why global crude prices remain subdued despite ongoing geopolitical conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East, aligning with the WSJ's observation of prices holding due to geopolitical risk.
It attributes this paradox to a significant global oil glut, with production consistently exceeding consumption. The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) reported implied inventory builds averaging over 2.5 million barrels per day in late 2025, creating substantial stockpiles that absorb market shocks.
Brent crude is forecast to average around $58 per barrel in 2026 and decline further into 2027. Key contributing factors include robust non-OPEC supply growth, particularly from U.S. shale, resilient Russian crude exports finding new markets at discounts, and varying OPEC+ compliance.
Demand growth has also moderated due to factors like EV adoption and efficiency improvements. The analysis concludes that in a surplus market, geopolitical events must physically remove meaningful supply to cause lasting price spikes, a condition not currently met, echoing the 1980s oil glut and signaling an "age of abundance."
Crude Glut at Sea Keeps Traders Guessing as Prices Hold on Geopolitical Risk(current)
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