Global oil markets began the new year on a tentative note on Friday, posting marginal gains after suffering their worst annual performance in five years, as traders weighed intensifying geopolitical flashpoints against persistent concerns about oversupply in the months ahead.
Brent crude futures, the international benchmark, edged up 22 cents to settle at $61.07 per barrel by 0833 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude rose by the same margin to $57.64. The modest uptick comes after both benchmarks recorded steep annual losses approaching 20% in 2025—their sharpest decline since the pandemic-ravaged year of 2020—and marks Brent’s third consecutive year of losses, the longest such streak in the history of the benchmark.
The modest price recovery reflects renewed geopolitical tensions, particularly in Eastern Europe, where Ukrainian forces have stepped up their aerial assault on Russian oil facilities. Kyiv has been systematically targeting energy infrastructure in recent months as part of a calculated strategy to choke off Moscow’s revenue streams that finance its military operations in the nearly four-year-old conflict.
Despite peace talks overseen by U.S. President Donald Trump aimed at ending the protracted war, both Russia and Ukraine exchanged accusations of attacks on civilian targets on New Year’s Day, underscoring the fragility of diplomatic efforts and the continued risk to regional energy supplies.
Adding to supply concerns, the Trump administration escalated its pressure campaign against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro this week, imposing fresh sanctions on Wednesday targeting four companies and their associated oil tankers operating in Venezuela’s oil sector. The move represents a continuation of Washington’s efforts to increase economic pressure on the Maduro government through restrictions on the country’s crucial petroleum exports.
The combined impact of disruptions to both Russian and Venezuelan oil flows—two significant producers on the global stage—provided underlying support for prices, even as broader market fundamentals suggest ample supply in the pipeline.
In a development that could complicate upcoming production decisions, a diplomatic crisis has erupted between key OPEC members Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates over Yemen. The dispute intensified after flights were halted at Aden’s airport on Thursday, just days before a critical virtual meeting of the OPEC+ alliance scheduled for January 4.
The 23-nation OPEC+ group, comprising the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allied producers including Russia, faces crucial decisions on output levels as the year begins. Market analysts widely anticipate the cartel will maintain its current pause on production increases through the first quarter.
“2026 will be an important year on assessing OPEC+ decisions for balancing supply,” said June Goh, an analyst at Sparta Commodities, who noted that China’s continued accumulation of crude stockpiles in the first half of the year should provide a price floor for the market.
Further complicating the supply picture, the Caspian Pipeline Consortium announced this week that it had suspended oil exports from its Black Sea terminal due to severe weather conditions. The CPC pipeline is a crucial artery for Kazakh crude reaching international markets.
“The CPC export terminal disruptions weigh on Kazakh production and exports,” noted Giovanni Staunovo, an analyst at UBS, highlighting yet another factor constraining near-term supply availability.
Despite these multiple geopolitical pressure points, market sentiment remains decidedly bearish for the year ahead. The 2025 decline—which saw both benchmarks shed roughly a fifth of their value—was driven primarily by concerns about global oversupply and the potential impact of tariffs on economic growth and energy demand, factors that overshadowed geopolitical risk premiums.
“As of now, we are expecting a fairly boring year for oil prices, range-bound around $60-65 a barrel,” said Suvro Sarkar, an energy analyst at DBS Bank. “The first quarter will be weak fundamentally. A renewal of geopolitical tensions is only registering as a blip right now for oil markets and driving some short-term rebounds but is unlikely to cause material movements.”
Priyanka Sachdeva, an analyst at Phillip Nova, echoed this cautious outlook in a client note, observing that the muted price action reflects “a struggle between short-term geopolitical risks and longer-term market fundamentals that point towards oversupply.” She projects WTI prices will trade within a $55 to $65 range during the first quarter.
As the oil market enters 2026, traders face the delicate task of weighing immediate supply disruptions from geopolitical conflicts against a broader landscape of abundant production capacity and uncertain demand growth. With OPEC+ deliberations looming and multiple geopolitical wildcards in play from Ukraine to Venezuela to the Middle East, the year ahead promises to test whether production discipline or market fundamentals will ultimately dictate price direction.
For now, the modest gains on the year’s first trading day suggest markets are taking a wait-and-see approach, acknowledging risks without yet pricing in significant supply shortfalls—a cautious stance that may well define trading patterns in the months to come.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Oil markets began 2026 with marginal gains, but the outlook remains subdued despite escalating geopolitical tensions. While Ukrainian strikes on Russian facilities, U.S. sanctions on Venezuela, and Middle East tensions between Saudi Arabia and the UAE are creating supply disruptions, analysts expect prices to remain range-bound between $60-65 per barrel for Brent crude.
























