Caught Between Headlines and Fundamentals
The market’s been whipsawed this week. Early losses came fast when Russia-Ukraine peace talks looked like they might go somewhere — traders priced in potential sanctions relief and more barrels hitting the market. But negotiations stalled, and crude clawed back ground over the past three sessions. As PVM’s John Evans put it, there’s no immediate sanctions relief, but hope for a future settlement is keeping a lid on any real rally.
Sunday’s OPEC+ meeting isn’t expected to deliver surprises. The group looks set to hold output steady and punt on production hikes into Q1 2026. That’s the kind of status quo the market can digest — but it doesn’t solve the bigger problem.
The Surplus Everyone Sees Coming
Analysts aren’t mincing words: 2026 is shaping up to be a year of oversupply. Reuters polled 35 forecasters, and the consensus has Brent averaging $62.23 next year — down from $68.80 so far in 2025. WTI forecasts slipped too, now pegged at $59.00. Surplus estimates range from 500,000 to 4.2 million barrels per day, depending on who you ask.
Saudi Arabia’s already signaling the pressure. Riyadh is expected to cut its January crude price for Asian buyers to a five-year low — a clear nod to the supply glut on the horizon.
What’s Holding the Floor?
Geopolitical risk premium, mostly. U.S. sanctions on Lukoil and Rosneft could create short-term disruptions, though most expect Russian barrels to find their way back via shadow fleets. Declining U.S. shale output and lingering headline risk should keep a floor somewhere around $60. HSBC’s Kim Fustier noted OPEC+ probably won’t cut again unless Brent drops below $55 for an extended stretch.
