Oil posts first weekly loss of 2025
WTI finished the week lower by more than $2 to $74.60/Bbl as prices retreated from recent highs. This is the first lower weekly settlement of 2025, following the rally seen in the past few weeks. Market participants continued to evaluate the possible impact of new sanctions on Russia, while comments from President Trump on OPEC pressured prices lower.
While speaking at Davos, President Trump said he would ask Saudi Arabia and other OPEC nations to “bring down the cost of oil,” adding that “if the price came down, the Ukraine-Russia war would end immediately.” Oil prices immediately fell following these comments. While OPEC is already planning to boost production this year, they have delayed this plan to restore output multiple times. Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin said he is willing to talk to Trump on oil and energy issues. Putin said in an interview, “We have a lot to discuss here, and there are other energy issues that might be mutually interesting,”
Buyers in Asia continued to scramble to secure supply due to the possibility of fewer cargoes from Russia. According to India's oil secretary, Indian refiners have until February 27 to unload sanctioned Russian cargoes. Several Russian tankers have resorted to changing flags to avoid detection, as Barbados and Panama are de-registering vessels on the US and UK sanctions list. While the ships will likely be able to find new flags, the sanctions are beginning to disrupt Russia’s oil export logistics.
AEGIS continues recommending clients hedge aggressively via swaps on price rallies as the Cal 25 strip has been trading in a tight band ($63 to $76) for the past two years. If prices in the low $60s are palatable, utilize collars to provide some additional upside participation.
Crude Oil Factors
Geopolitical Risk Premium. (Bullish, Surprise) Conflict in the Middle East helped offset much of the bearish demand story in 2024. Although no crude flows were disrupted, fears of a wider conflict supported oil prices. With Israel and Hamas having reached a ceasefire agreement earlier in 2025, the amount of geopolitical risk premium in the market will likley come out.
Trade Flows. (Bearish, Priced In) Traders are stepping back out of speculative positions amid potential weakness in demand, forecast for an oversupply in 2025, and broader equities sell-off is exerting downward pressure on oil prices. Oil prices tracked equity markets since March 2023 as renewed worries over the U.S. and European banking sectors subsided. AEGIS also notes that the recent movement in prices could be driven by the price trend (technical selling or buying) itself rather than the fundamentals. We see that trade flows have been affecting price action in commodity markets in recent months, as recent movements in the crude market have partially been attributed to algorithmic selling.
OPEC Market Share War. (Bearish, Surprise) The possibility exists, albeit a small one, that should OPEC's efforts to bolster oil prices through production cuts prove unsuccessful, the cartel could potentially flood the market with additional barrels as a strategy to reset. OPEC has pushed its plan to unwind existing 2.2 MMBbl/d production cuts by two months. Now, starting in December, the unwind is set to gradually bring 180 MBbl/d of oil back into the market every month.
Oil/Product Inventories. (Bullish, Mostly Priced In) Crude inventories in the US sit at the lowest level since January while stocks at Cushing are at their lowest since November. Meanwhile, refined product inventories in both the U.S. and abroad are low. Crude data is usually on a several-month lag. According to the January IEA report, OECD inventories were nearly 200 MMBbl below the five-year average as of November. The oil market has likely remained in a slight supply deficit since then, so inventories could be lower now, as evidenced by the backwardation in the forward curve.
Economic Slowdown. (Bearish, Mostly Priced In) The latest U.S. economic data revealed a stronger-than-expected GDP growth of 2.9% annualized in 2Q. Meanwhile, the PCE price index, the Fed's preferred inflation measure, rose 2.1% Y-o-Y in September,the smallest year-on-year rise since February 2021 and followed a 2.3% advance in August. In September, the CPI rose by 2.4% Y-o-Y, indicating that inflation is falling in line with the Fed’s 2% target. Swap traders now forecast a 43 bp rate cut for the rest of the year. Macroeconomic uncertainties could pressure oil demand. According to the EIA, U.S. real GDP declined by 2.8% in 2020, and they estimate U.S. GDP increased by 5.9% in 2021. They estimate GDP has risen by 2.1% in 2022. 2.5% in 2023 and are forecasting it would rise by 2.4% in 2024. While that doesn't sound all too bad, the main takeaway is that crude oil demand growth would likely slow with GDP, and if supply growth outpaces demand growth, then you would find yourself in a structurally weaker market.
OPEC+ Quotas. (Bullish, Priced In) On June 2, OPEC+ announced its extension of 3.66 MMBbl/d cuts through December 2025. Additionally, the 2.2 MMBbl/d voluntary cuts from eight member countries will continue into Q3 2024 but will start to be reversed in October at a rate of 0.18 MMBbl/d per month. OPEC+ members agreed on September 5 to delay a planned gradual 2.2 MMBbl/d supply hike by two months, shifting the start to December. The group will add 0.19 MMBbl/d in December and 0.21 MMBbl/d from January onwards, with an option to adjust or pause these hikes depending on market conditions. The cartel also reaffirmed its compensation cuts of 0.2 MMBbl/d per month through November 2025, as members such as Iraq, Russia, and Kazakhstan have struggled to meet their original production quotas.
AEGIS notes that the global crude market would quickly build inventories without OPEC's support in reducing supply.
OPEC Unwind/Compliance. (Bearish, Surprise) The new voluntary OPEC+ production cuts put member nations' adherence to quotas under scrutiny. Any deviation, such as halting, reversing, or exceeding their quotas, could end up being one of the surprise bearish factors weighing on the market. OPEC has delayed the unwind of its 2.2 MMBbl/d voluntary production cut for a second time to January despite its forecast of nearly 2 MMBbl/d demand growth in 2025. This cautious approach reflects weak demand, particularly from China, and rising non-OPEC supply, which keeps downward pressure on prices. Typically, OPEC+’s output cuts act as a price floor, but with up to 6 MMBbl/d in spare capacity, the group can act as a cap for prices as well, likely to adopt a month-to-month strategy that could test group cohesion over time.
China Demand. (Bearish, Priced In) China's oil demand has been severely affected in 2022 by strict COVID-19 control measures. Reduced mobility has hindered economic activity and, therefore, consumption. China eased its Covid restrictions in early December 2022 and announced a slew of economic measures to boost its economy. As the country completely emerged from the lockdowns, its oil demand was expected to rise, putting extra strain on a market that has already tightened dramatically since Russia invaded Ukraine. However, the pace of Chinese demand growth has been slow compared to what the market had expected. Absolute Chinese oil consumption is expected to hit a record high this year. According to the IEA, Chinese demand rose by 1.7 MMBbl/d in 2023 and is expected to increase by just 0.18 MMBbl/d in 2024. China underpins the deceleration in growth, accounting for around 20% of global gains both this year and next year, compared to almost 70% in 2023. China’s demand is important as it is nearly half of the global demand growth in 2024. However, China's apparent oil demand fell 6.98% Y-o-Y in September to 14.18 MMBbl/d, driven by weakness in fuel demand.
USD/Fed (Bullish, Surprise) The US dollar index had a sixth consecutive weekly gain, climbing above the 200-day SMA, supported by a 25 bps Fed rate cut and renewed investor confidence tied to potential Trump policies. Trump’s proposed tariffs on China and Europe are expected to stoke inflation, while Republican-led tax cuts might offset growth impacts, though potentially widening the budget deficit. Fed Chair Jerome Powell indicated that while inflation remains a concern, further rate cuts could slow if inflation rises, with future moves contingent on labor market shifts. Economic resilience and US outperformance versus G10 peers underpin the Dollar's robust outlook.
Non-OPEC Production. (Bearish, Priced-In) Many prominent research groups (EIA, IEA, OPEC) think non-OPEC production, dominated by the U.S., will increase in 2023. If these forecasts come to fruition, it would have a slightly bearish impact on oil prices if the market were otherwise well-supplied. IEA forecasts the 2024 and 2025 non-OPEC production to increase by 1.5 MMBbl/d.
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