Abstract:International oil prices are locked in a volatile tussle between immediate geopolitical supply risks and a grim long-term demand outlook. While WTI Crude has managed to climb toward $58.50, the upside is capped by forecasts of a massive supply glut by 2026.

International oil prices are locked in a volatile tussle between immediate geopolitical supply risks and a grim long-term demand outlook. While WTI Crude has managed to climb toward $58.50, the upside is capped by forecasts of a massive supply glut by 2026.
Risk premiums surged this week following the largest drone exchanges of the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Russia reported intercepting 141 Ukrainian drones, while Kyiv reported a barrage of 131 Russian drones, targeting critical energy infrastructure and ports in Odessa.
Simultaneously, tensions in South America are escalating. The US has intercepted tankers linked to Venezuela, enforcing a blockade that threatens to disrupt regional heavy crude supplies. This dual-theater geopolitical friction is currently the primary floor preventing oil from testing the $55.00 handle.
Despite the war drums, the structural outlook for energy remains bearish. The International Energy Agency (IEA) and market analysts warn of a potential 4 million barrel per day (bpd) surplus by 2026, driven by record output from non-OPEC producers like the US, Brazil, and Guyana.
Short-term data supports the bearish narrative. API data showed US crude inventories rose by 2.39 million barrels last week, signaling weak domestic absorption. furthermore, European imports of US energy have fallen 7% short of trade deal targets, highlighting demand weakness in the Eurozone.
Technically, WTI is testing the 50-day SMA near $59.00. A failure to break this dynamic resistance, coupled with fierce competition for West African crude cargoes, suggests the path of least resistance remains lower. Traders should watch the $55.00 structural support; a break below this level could open the door to a test of $53.00.