Global oil prices maintained a tenuous equilibrium on Friday as markets grappled with a complex web of geopolitical developments that threaten to reshape supply dynamics, even as trading volumes remained exceptionally light in the aftermath of the Christmas holiday.
Brent crude, the international benchmark, edged up 12 cents to $62.36 per barrel by mid-morning London time, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude gained 19 cents to reach $58.54. The modest uptick belied deeper anxieties rippling through energy markets as the year draws to a close.
The muted price movement comes against a sobering backdrop: oil is headed for its sharpest annual decline since the pandemic-ravaged year of 2020. The culprit is an unexpected abundance of supply, with production increases from both OPEC+ members and non-aligned producers flooding the market and raising the specter of a significant surplus in the months ahead.
President Donald Trump announced Thursday that U.S. forces had conducted airstrikes against Islamic State militants in Nigeria’s northwestern Sokoto state, operating in coordination with the Nigerian government. However, analysts were quick to note that the military action posed minimal immediate threat to the country’s oil infrastructure.
“Nigerian strikes touted by Trump are targeting Islamic State and not specifically impacting any crude pipelines or oil terminals,” explained June Goh, senior oil market analyst at Sparta Commodities. “Thus, traders are staying on the sidelines in this thin liquidity market on Boxing Day.”
Indeed, Nigeria’s critical oil production facilities and export terminals are concentrated in the country’s southern regions, far removed from the northwestern theater of military operations. The geographical separation has provided some reassurance to markets that Africa’s largest oil exporter can maintain its output levels despite the security concerns.
In a separate development with potentially far-reaching implications, the White House has directed U.S. military forces to enforce what it termed a “quarantine” on Venezuelan oil for at least the next two months. The move signals Washington’s preference for economic coercion over military intervention in its ongoing effort to exert pressure on the Caracas government.
The directive adds another layer of uncertainty to an already fragile market, though analysts note that Venezuelan production has been severely constrained for years due to underinvestment and previous sanctions.
“Due to the Christmas holiday closure, year-end market activity remained relatively subdued,” observed Tong Chuan, an analyst at Galaxy Futures. “Supply-side disruptions have become the primary driver of oil prices.”
That assessment reflects a fundamental shift in market dynamics. Where demand concerns dominated much of the previous year’s price action, attention has now pivoted to supply-side vulnerabilities exposed by geopolitical instability.
Perhaps the most significant variable facing oil markets in the coming weeks involves the potential for progress in Russia-Ukraine peace negotiations. Any breakthrough agreement could trigger the removal of international sanctions that have constrained Russian oil exports, potentially flooding the market with additional supply.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy struck an optimistic tone Friday, suggesting that significant developments could materialize before the New Year and expressing hope for an imminent meeting with President Trump. Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin has reportedly signaled openness to territorial concessions in discussions with senior Russian business leaders, according to the Kommersant newspaper.
The prospect of Russian crude returning to global markets in larger volumes represents both an opportunity for consumers seeking relief from energy costs and a threat to producers already grappling with oversupply concerns.
As trading desks gradually return to full staffing in the days ahead, analysts expect volatility to increase as market participants digest the implications of these overlapping geopolitical developments. The fundamental tension between abundant supply and potential disruption risks is likely to define price action well into the new year.
For now, the oil market finds itself in an uneasy stalemate, with prices neither collapsing under the weight of oversupply nor surging on geopolitical fears—a reflection of the profound uncertainty that characterizes the current energy landscape.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Despite geopolitical tensions from U.S. strikes in Nigeria and increased pressure on Venezuelan oil, global crude prices remained largely flat on Friday, reflecting the market’s overriding concern: a looming supply glut. Oil is headed for its worst annual decline since 2020, driven by rising production from OPEC+ and non-OPEC nations that have flooded the market with excess supply.
Geopolitical risks are taking a backseat to fundamental oversupply. Even potential supply disruptions cannot offset the reality that too much oil is chasing too little demand. The wildcard is Russia-Ukraine peace talks—any deal lifting sanctions on Russian oil could flood an already saturated market with even more crude, pushing prices lower. As 2025 ends, the oil market faces a simple truth: abundance, not scarcity, is driving prices down.























