Oil prices maintained a cautious equilibrium on Friday, as markets weighed competing pressures from renewed trade deal optimism against the prospect of increased Venezuelan crude supply returning to global markets.
Brent crude futures climbed 18 cents to $69.36 per barrel by mid-morning GMT, representing a modest 0.26% gain, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude posted similar gains at $66.21 per barrel. Despite Friday’s uptick, the broader weekly picture reveals a market struggling for direction—Brent managed only a marginal 0.1% weekly gain, while WTI appeared headed for a 1.7% weekly decline.
The tepid performance reflects what PVM analyst John Evans characterized as oil markets being “caught in largely a holding pattern brought about by inconclusive specific oil drivers.” This assessment rings particularly true given Brent’s month-long confinement within a narrow $67-70 trading range, a pattern established following the sharp price correction in late June when Iran-Israel tensions unexpectedly de-escalated.
The primary catalyst supporting prices on Friday came from renewed optimism surrounding U.S. trade negotiations, with oil joining broader equity markets in rallying on prospects of expanded commercial agreements ahead of the looming August 1 tariff deadline.
The momentum built on this week’s U.S.-Japan trade accord, with European diplomatic sources indicating the European Union is advancing toward a framework deal that would establish a baseline 15% U.S. tariff on EU imports, potentially with selective exemptions.
However, this trade-driven bullishness faces a significant counterweight in the form of anticipated Venezuelan supply increases. Market intelligence suggests U.S. authorities are preparing to authorize limited operations by Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA partners, beginning with American energy giant Chevron. This development could inject more than 200,000 additional barrels per day into global markets—a welcome development for U.S. refiners grappling with heavy crude supply constraints, according to ING analysts.
The delicate balance between these competing forces has created what analysts describe as a market in search of clear direction. Additional support materialized this week from supply disruptions affecting Black Sea oil exports and Azeri BTC crude shipments through Turkey’s Ceyhan terminal. Commerzbank’s Carsten Fritsch noted these logistical challenges likely contributed to Brent’s recent approach toward the $70 threshold, though he cautioned that price support may weaken as export operations normalize.
The current market dynamics underscore the complex web of geopolitical, trade, and supply considerations that continue to shape global oil pricing. With Venezuelan sanctions potentially easing while trade tensions show signs of resolution, market participants find themselves navigating an environment where traditional supply-demand fundamentals compete with diplomatic developments for influence over crude prices.
As markets head into the weekend, the prevailing sentiment appears to be one of cautious observation, with traders positioning for potential shifts in both trade policy and sanctions regimes that could reshape the global energy landscape in the coming weeks.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Oil prices remained essentially flat on Friday as two major forces canceled each other out: optimism over U.S. trade deals with Japan and potentially the EU provided upward pressure, while expectations of increased Venezuelan oil supply (up to 200,000 barrels per day through eased sanctions on Chevron) weighed on prices.
Brent crude is stuck in a narrow $67-70 range for the past month, reflecting a market caught between conflicting signals. The bottom line: oil markets are in a holding pattern, waiting for clearer direction from either trade policy developments or concrete changes in Venezuelan supply levels. Current price stability masks underlying uncertainty about which factor will ultimately dominate.





















