Oil prices surrendered earlier gains on Wednesday, sliding more than 1% as market participants focused on an anticipated surge in U.S. crude stockpiles, overshadowing both a significant production outage in Kazakhstan and escalating geopolitical tensions surrounding President Donald Trump’s controversial pursuit of Greenland.
By mid-morning European trading, Brent crude futures had declined 97 cents, or 1.5%, settling at $63.95 per barrel at 0745 GMT. The U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate followed suit, dropping 78 cents, or 1.3%, to $59.58 a barrel—a notable reversal from Tuesday’s session when both contracts climbed nearly $1, or 1.5%.
The retreat comes despite ongoing supply disruptions at two of Kazakhstan’s most critical oil facilities. The Tengiz and Korolev fields—with Tengiz ranking among the world’s largest producing assets—have remained offline since Sunday following power distribution failures. Industry sources speaking to Reuters indicated the outages could persist for another seven to ten days, representing a substantial withdrawal of crude from global markets.
Tuesday’s price rally had been fueled by news of the Kazakh shutdowns, alongside encouraging economic data from China that suggested stronger energy demand from the world’s largest crude importer. However, Wednesday’s trading revealed the market’s underlying anxieties about oversupply conditions in the United States.
“The oil output halt at Tengiz and Korolev is temporary,” explained Tony Sycamore, market analyst at IG, “and downward pressure from an expected rise in U.S. crude inventories along with geopolitical tension will persist.”
According to a preliminary Reuters survey of six analysts, U.S. crude stockpiles are projected to have increased by approximately 1.7 million barrels during the week ending January 16. Gasoline inventories are also expected to show growth, though distillate stocks likely contracted. The American Petroleum Institute’s weekly inventory report, delayed by Monday’s federal holiday, is scheduled for release at 4:30 p.m. EST Wednesday, with official Energy Information Administration data following at noon Thursday.
Rising inventories typically signal weakening demand or oversupply conditions—both bearish indicators that can weigh heavily on prices even amid production disruptions elsewhere.
Adding another layer of complexity to the market outlook, President Trump’s renewed threats to impose tariffs on European nations have introduced fresh uncertainty. The president has conditioned these potential levies on negotiations over U.S. control of Greenland, the autonomous Danish territory. On Tuesday, Trump declared there was “no going back” on his ambition to acquire the Arctic island.
Market observers worry such tariffs could dampen economic growth across the Atlantic, subsequently reducing oil demand from Europe, a significant consuming region. The unusual diplomatic standoff represents yet another unpredictable variable in an already volatile geopolitical landscape.
Meanwhile, tensions in the Middle East continue to simmer. President Trump recently threatened military action against Iran in response to the government’s violent suppression of anti-regime protests. On Tuesday, Iran’s national security parliamentary commission, quoted by the Iranian Students’ News Agency, warned that any attack on Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei would trigger a declaration of jihad.
Gregory Brew, senior analyst with the Eurasia Group consultancy, suggested these Middle Eastern tensions could provide underlying support for prices despite near-term bearish inventory data. “While the U.S. demurred from striking Iran immediately, tensions are likely to remain high as additional U.S. military assets move to the Middle East and diplomacy to de-escalate tensions fails to make progress,” Brew noted.
The competing forces—supply disruptions in Kazakhstan and potential Middle East conflicts pushing prices upward versus rising U.S. inventories and tariff-related growth concerns pulling them downward—have left traders navigating a complex and uncertain market environment.
For now, the fundamentals of supply and demand appear to be winning out over geopolitical risk premiums, though analysts caution that calculation could shift rapidly should tensions escalate further.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Oil markets are prioritizing concerns about oversupply over supply disruptions. Despite major production outages at Kazakhstan’s Tengiz and Korolev fields—which could last another week—crude prices dropped on Wednesday as traders focused on an expected 1.7 million barrel increase in U.S. inventories.
This signals that current global supply remains adequate despite regional disruptions and that demand concerns—amplified by Trump’s tariff threats over Greenland—are weighing more heavily on market sentiment than geopolitical risks in the Middle East or actual production losses.























