After two days of heavy selling, traders are now focused on competing headlines: growing speculation around an OPEC+ output hike and weakening demand signals across global economies. Brent and WTI have dropped more than 4.5% over the last 48 hours, with Monday marking the sharpest daily drop since August.
Conflicting OPEC+ Signals Keep Market on Edge
OPEC+ chatter continues to influence sentiment after reports surfaced suggesting the group may boost output by up to 500,000 barrels per day in November—triple the prior increase. Sources cited Saudi Arabia’s intention to reclaim market share as a key driver. However, OPEC attempted to walk back the speculation, calling the media reports “misleading” in a post on X (formerly Twitter).
Traders remain wary, especially given the group’s history of mixed messaging. For now, the threat of increased supply is enough to keep upward price momentum capped, particularly with technical resistance levels still overhead.
Russia Diesel Ban and Kurdish Flow Disruptions Offer Temporary Support
Geopolitical supply risks haven’t disappeared entirely. Russia extended its gasoline export ban through year-end and tightened restrictions on diesel shipments in response to Ukrainian attacks on infrastructure. At the same time, the recent restart of Kurdish exports via Turkey is no longer dominating the supply narrative, though it helped trigger earlier selling.
These developments have limited impact in the face of broader demand worries, but they’re still enough to prevent a full capitulation from the bulls—at least for now.
Shutdown Threat Adds Demand Uncertainty, Clouds Fed Outlook
Demand concerns are accelerating, led by weak economic data and growing fallout from the ongoing U.S. government shutdown. The Bureau of Labor Statistics has already suspended jobs and inflation reports, creating a Fed data blackout ahead of its October 29 policy meeting. Without payroll or CPI visibility, the Fed is likely to hold rates steady, complicating monetary forecasts and lifting curve flattening risk.