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Home.forex news reportCrude Prices Tumble on Signs of Robust Global Oil Supplies

Crude Prices Tumble on Signs of Robust Global Oil Supplies

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February WTI crude oil (CLG26) on Wednesday closed down -1.14 (-2.00%), and February RBOB gasoline (RBG26) closed down -0.061 (-0.36%).

Crude oil and gasoline prices sold off on Wednesday, with crude falling to a 2-week low.  Crude prices tumbled on Wednesday after the US lifted some sanctions on Venezuelan crude exports and President Trump said  Venezuela’s interim authorities agreed to give up as many as 50 million bbl of “high-quality sanctioned oil” to the US.

Crude prices recovered from their worst level on Wednesday after weekly EIA crude inventories fell more than expected.  Also, heightened geopolitical tensions are supportive for crude after the US seized a Russian-flagged oil tanker for sanction violations.  In addition, Wednesday’s rally in the S&P 500 to a new record high shows confidence in the economic outlook that is supportive of energy demand.

Crude prices came under pressure on Wednesday when the US Energy Department said that it would begin selectively rolling back sanctions to enable the transport and sale of Venezuelan crude and oil products to global markets,  potentially boosting global oil supplies.  Venezuela is currently the twelfth largest crude producer in OPEC.

Concerns about energy demand are negative for crude prices after Saudi Arabia on Monday cut the price of its Arab Light crude for February delivery to customers for a third month.

Morgan Stanley predicted that a global oil market surplus is likely to expand further and peak mid-year, pressuring prices, as it cut its crude price forecast for Q1 to $57.50/bbl from a prior forecast of $60/bbl, and cut its Q2 crude price forecast to $55/bbl from $60/bbl.

Vortexa reported Monday that crude oil stored on tankers that have been stationary for at least 7 days fell -3.4% w/w to 119.35 million bbl in the week ended January 2.

Strength in Chinese crude demand is supportive for prices.  According to Kpler data, China’s crude imports in December are set to increase by 10% m/m to a record 12.2 million bpd as it rebuilds its crude inventories.

Crude garnered support after OPEC+ on Sunday said it would stick to its plan to pause production increases in Q1 of 2026.  OPEC+ at its November 2025 meeting announced that members would raise production by +137,000 bpd in December, but will then pause the production hikes in Q1-2026 due to the emerging global oil surplus.  The IEA in mid-October forecasted a record global oil surplus of 4.0 million bpd for 2026.  OPEC+ is trying to restore all of the 2.2 million bpd production cut it made in early 2024, but still has another 1.2 million bpd of production left to restore.  OPEC’s November crude production fell by -10,000 bpd to 29.09 million bpd.



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