Global crude benchmarks edged sideways in early-morning trading on Monday as the oil market awaited an official statement from President Donald Trump, expected to address U.S. energy policy, including possible changes to sanctions enforcement and Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) management.
The announcement, due later today, could alter the trajectory of sanctioned oil flows and trigger volatility across supply-sensitive benchmarks.
Oil prices were cautiously ticking upwards in Asian trading, with Brent crude up a slight 0.21% to trade at $70.51 on Monday, July 14, at 1:28 a.m. ET, while WTI was trading up 0.19% at $68.58.
Market participants are anticipating clarity on the administration’s posture toward Iran, Venezuela, and Russia, as whispers of policy recalibration circulate among Gulf Coast exporters and compliance desks in Geneva. While fundamentals remain anchored by OPEC+ discipline and resilient global demand, any executive pivot on sanctions or SPR volumes could shift the balance.
SPR inventory stands at approximately 403 million barrels as of the week ending July?4,?2025, a slight increase (~238,000 barrels) from the prior week. Funding to replenish the reserve has been significantly cut, with the Senate slashing refill budget from $1.3?billion to $171?million, which is enough to purchase only ~3 million barrels instead of the planned 20 million, Reuters reported earlier this month.
According to ING’s Warren Patterson, the crude market remains “paralyzed by political anticipation,” as traders weigh whether Washington will tighten secondary enforcement or loosen controls to ease refinery pressure heading into peak summer demand.
Refiners, especially in the Midwest and along the Gulf Coast, are watching closely. The prospect of a near-term SPR draw or relaxed restrictions on sanctioned barrels could depress sour crude differentials, while stricter maritime tracking or fresh designations could send risk premiums higher.
Hedge funds have begun to reposition. CFTC data show speculative net longs in Brent and WTI rising modestly last week, reversing a two-week decline. That shift, however, remains cautious, reflecting uncertainty over the scope of the administration’s energy signal.
With gasoline demand still strong and diesel margins narrowing, traders say today’s remarks from President Trump may mark a policy inflection point. Until then, price action remains tightly tethered to D.C. instead of Riyadh.
By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com
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