Global oil prices edged higher on Thursday morning, breaking a three-session losing streak as traders weighed escalating geopolitical risks against persistent worries about market oversupply, in a session that highlighted the competing forces shaping energy markets.
Brent crude futures, the international benchmark, rose 20 cents or 0.31% to reach $65.55 per barrel by 0631 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude gained 20 cents or 0.32% to trade at $61.98 per barrel. The modest gains came after both benchmarks suffered approximately 1% losses in Wednesday’s trading, with Brent settling at its lowest level since early June and WTI at its weakest since late May.
Technical and Geopolitical Support
Market analysts characterized Thursday’s recovery as partly technical in nature, with strategic buying emerging as prices approached psychologically important support levels. “Buying interest emerged as WTI neared its $60 support level, while heightened geopolitical risks and speculation about tighter sanctions on Russian crude also lent support,” explained Hiroyuki Kikukawa, chief strategist at Nissan Securities Investment.
The geopolitical backdrop intensified on Wednesday when the Group of Seven finance ministers announced plans to escalate pressure on Moscow’s oil revenues. The G7 pledged to target entities that continue increasing Russian oil purchases and those facilitating efforts to circumvent existing sanctions – a move that could potentially tighten global supply if effectively implemented.
Adding to market uncertainty, two U.S. officials confirmed to Reuters that Washington will provide Ukraine with intelligence capabilities for long-range missile strikes targeting Russian energy infrastructure. According to reports first published in The Wall Street Journal, this intelligence sharing will enable Ukrainian forces to strike refineries, pipelines, and other critical oil infrastructure with the explicit goal of depriving the Kremlin of petroleum revenues.
China Factor Provides Price Floor
Demand from China, the world’s largest crude oil importer, also helped underpin prices during Thursday’s session. Traders noted that ongoing stockpiling activity in the Asian giant limited downside potential for crude benchmarks, providing a measure of support even as other factors weighed on market sentiment.
Oversupply Concerns Cap Gains
Despite these supportive elements, oil’s recovery remained constrained by mounting concerns about market oversupply. Kikukawa pointed to two key factors capping price gains: anxieties about the global economy stemming from the U.S. government shutdown, and expectations of increased production from OPEC+ nations.
The domestic political situation in Washington has added another layer of uncertainty to market calculations. President Donald Trump‘s administration froze $26 billion in funding for Democratic-leaning states on Wednesday, following through on threats to leverage the government shutdown for political purposes – moves that raise questions about broader economic stability.
OPEC+ Production Plans Weigh on Sentiment
More significantly for oil markets, OPEC+ – the coalition comprising the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allied producers including Russia – is reportedly considering a substantial production increase. Three sources familiar with ongoing negotiations told Reuters that the group could agree to boost output by up to 500,000 barrels per day in November, triple the increase implemented for October.
This potential production surge reflects Saudi Arabia’s strategic push to reclaim market share, but comes at a particularly challenging time. U.S. and Asian demand indicators are showing signs of softening, raising questions about whether the market can absorb additional barrels without triggering another price decline.
Rising U.S. Inventories Signal Weak Demand
Data released Wednesday by the U.S. Energy Information Administration underscored these demand concerns. The agency reported that crude oil, gasoline, and distillate inventories all rose last week as both refining activity and consumption weakened. Crude stockpiles climbed by 1.8 million barrels to reach 416.5 million barrels in the week ending September 26, exceeding analyst expectations for a 1-million-barrel increase.
The inventory build suggests that U.S. refiners are processing less crude while consumer demand remains lackluster – a troubling combination for oil bulls hoping for sustained price recovery.
Market Outlook Remains Uncertain
As traders look ahead, the oil market faces a delicate balancing act. Geopolitical risks stemming from the Russia-Ukraine conflict and potential supply disruptions provide a floor under prices, while fundamental concerns about oversupply and weakening demand threaten to push benchmarks lower.
The coming weeks will prove crucial as OPEC+ finalizes its November production plans and as the market assesses whether tightened sanctions on Russian crude will materially impact global supply flows. With Brent trading well below $70 per barrel and WTI hovering near the critical $60 threshold, energy markets remain in a state of nervous equilibrium, vulnerable to sharp moves in either direction depending on which narrative – supply disruption or demand destruction – ultimately prevails.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Oil prices staged a modest recovery on Thursday, but the market remains caught in a tug-of-war between two powerful forces: geopolitical tensions that could tighten supply (G7 sanctions on Russian oil and potential Ukrainian strikes on Russian energy infrastructure) versus oversupply concerns driven by OPEC+’s plans to potentially triple production increases to 500,000 barrels per day in November, even as U.S. inventories rise and demand weakens.























