OPEC+ Output Hike in Focus as Canada Wildfires Curtail Supply
Oil prices are holding steady as markets weigh the implications of OPEC+ unwinding 411,000 bpd of production in July. This increase, expected to soften prices, is being partially offset by supply losses out of Canada. Wildfires in Alberta have sidelined roughly 344,000 bpd—about 7% of the country’s output—supporting prices in the near term.
The short-term market tone remains underpinned by Tuesday’s 2% gain in both Brent and WTI. That rally was driven by heightened geopolitical risks and expectations that Iran will reject a U.S. nuclear deal, delaying the return of Iranian barrels. Barclays analysts noted risks are tilted to the upside as Russian and Iranian exports remain subject to elevated geopolitical risk premiums.
Geopolitical Tensions with Iran and Russia Add to Market Risk Premium
Sanctions and war-related uncertainties continue to dominate crude oil news today. Russia signaled no imminent resolution in its war with Ukraine, dampening hopes of a ceasefire and keeping OPEC+ supply from Moscow constrained. Similarly, U.S. efforts to revive the Iranian nuclear deal are stalling, with Tehran expected to reject Washington’s latest proposal. These tensions are contributing to a stronger risk premium, further boosting crude benchmarks.
Federal Reserve and OECD Flag Economic Concerns as Demand Outlook Wavers
On the demand side, macroeconomic signals are mixed. The OECD trimmed its global growth forecast, citing fallout from U.S. tariffs and rising trade tension with China. Meanwhile, the European Central Bank could ease policy further after inflation undershot expectations. In contrast, the Fed’s Austan Goolsbee warned that inflation from tariffs may arrive faster than any demand slowdown.
U.S. labor data also suggests softening fundamentals, with job openings up but layoffs seeing their sharpest increase in nine months. Despite this, oil demand expectations are being supported by ongoing low interest rates and seasonal fuel consumption.
Crude Inventory Draw Strengthens Short-Term Bullish Outlook
API data shows a 3.3 million barrel draw in U.S. commercial crude stocks last week, beating expectations and signaling strong near-term demand. Gasoline and distillate builds are substantial, but not enough to outweigh the bullish signal from crude inventory trends.