Oil prices were holding relatively steady early on Tuesday morning following a sharp rally on Monday driven by mounting geopolitical tensions and supportive trade developments. At the time of writing, WTI Crude was trading at $66.60 per barrel, down $0.06 or 0.09%, while Brent Crude hovered at $70.00, slipping just $0.04 or 0.06%.
Among the catalysts for Monday’s rally—where Brent futures surged more than 2.3%—was President Trump’s decision to drastically reduce the timeline for Russia to broker peace in Ukraine. Originally expected to be a 50-day negotiation window, the new deadline is now a mere 10–12 days, with potential for severe secondary sanctions should Moscow fail to act.
Analysts at ING note that if enforced, these measures could dramatically reshape the global oil landscape. Trump’s warning includes 100% secondary tariffs on any country importing Russian crude. This would place heavy economic pressure on China, India, and Turkey, who have significantly increased Russian oil imports since the start of the war.
Whether or not these sanctions would be enforced remains unclear, with Trump’s preference for lower oil prices having the potential to temper his appetite for measures that would ignite a spike. As ING points out, Russian oil exports exceed 7 million b/d, and any disruption would erase the projected market surplus through 2026.
While geopolitical risks are pushing supply-side pressure higher, demand fundamentals also found support in recent trade developments. Over the weekend, the U.S. and European Union signed a framework agreement that cut potential export tariffs from 30% to 15%, a move that significantly eased transatlantic trade tensions.
More importantly for energy markets, the deal includes a commitment by the EU to purchase $750 billion worth of U.S. energy products over the coming years. This bolstered long-term demand expectations and helped underpin investor confidence.
Traders are also eyeing OPEC+ developments. A key panel meeting has called for full compliance with production quotas, ahead of the August 3 ministerial summit, which is expected to consider a potential supply boost for September. The current backdrop of geopolitical uncertainty may influence the group’s willingness to raise output.
Meanwhile, caution prevails ahead of this week’s Federal Reserve meeting, with the central bank widely expected to keep interest rates steady in the 4.25%–4.50% range. The Fed’s tone on inflation and economic resilience could further shape oil demand expectations heading into August.
By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com
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