Global oil prices extended their upward trajectory on Monday morning, building on substantial gains from the previous week as a confluence of supply disruptions and geopolitical uncertainties continues to reshape market dynamics in early 2026.
Brent crude futures, the international benchmark, climbed 42 cents to $66.30 per barrel by 0721 GMT, representing a 0.7% increase. Meanwhile, U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude posted identical gains, rising 42 cents to $61.49 per barrel.
The Monday session follows a strong finish to last week, with both benchmarks securing weekly advances of 2.7% and closing Friday at levels not seen since mid-January—their highest settlements in nearly two weeks.
The immediate catalyst for the price surge stems from Winter Storm Fern, which has battered major energy-producing regions along the U.S. coast, forcing operators to curtail production amid deteriorating conditions. According to JPMorgan analysts, approximately 250,000 barrels per day of crude output have been taken offline due to the severe weather event.
The disruptions have been particularly acute in Oklahoma’s Bakken field and across parts of Texas, where frigid temperatures and hazardous conditions have compelled companies to implement temporary shut-ins. The storm has simultaneously placed significant strain on the regional power grid, compounding operational challenges for producers.
“Winter storm Fern struck the U.S. coast, forcing shut-ins in major crude and natural gas producing regions and adding stress to the power grid,” explained Priyanka Sachdeva, senior market analyst at Phillip Nova. “Oil markets are experiencing a mild upswing as outages tighten physical flows.”
Beyond weather-related supply constraints, traders are increasingly pricing in risk premiums associated with escalating tensions in the Middle East. The region’s persistent volatility has returned to the forefront of market concerns following recent developments involving the United States and Iran.
President Trump’s announcement that a U.S. aircraft carrier strike group and supporting naval assets would deploy to the Middle East in the coming days has heightened anxiety about potential supply disruptions from one of the world’s most critical oil-producing regions.
“President Trump’s declaration of a U.S. armada sailing toward Iran has reignited supply-disruption fears, adding a risk premium to crude prices and supporting risk aversion flows more broadly this morning,” noted Tony Sycamore, market analyst at IG.
The situation intensified Friday when a senior Iranian official issued a stark warning, stating that Tehran would regard any military strike “as an all-out war against us.” Such rhetoric has kept investors on edge and contributed to the risk premium now embedded in oil prices.
Market observers suggest the current price environment reflects a complex interplay of short-term supply tightness against a backdrop of longer-term oversupply concerns.
“Oil prices are being tickled this week by signs of production disruptions in the U.S., coupled with persistent geopolitical risk against the notion of an oversupplied 2026,” Sachdeva said, highlighting the delicate balance traders are attempting to navigate.
While weather-related outages are typically temporary, the duration of Winter Storm Fern’s impact on U.S. production remains uncertain. Similarly, the trajectory of U.S.-Iran relations could significantly influence market sentiment in the weeks ahead, particularly if tensions escalate further.
In related developments, Kazakhstan’s Caspian Pipeline Consortium announced Sunday that it had restored full loading capacity at its Black Sea terminal following the completion of scheduled maintenance work on one of its three mooring points. The return to normal operations provides some relief to global supply channels, though the impact appears modest given the other factors currently driving prices.
As markets continue to digest these competing dynamics, analysts expect volatility to persist in the near term, with weather forecasts for U.S. producing regions and diplomatic developments in the Middle East likely to remain key drivers of price action.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Oil prices are rising due to a dual threat: Winter Storm Fern has knocked out 250,000 barrels per day of U.S. production in Texas and Oklahoma, while escalating U.S.-Iran tensions—marked by an American carrier strike group heading to the Middle East—have injected geopolitical risk premiums into the market.
Both Brent and WTI crude were up 0.7% Monday and posted their highest levels since mid-January, with the combination of immediate weather-related supply disruptions and potential Middle East conflict creating upward pressure despite broader concerns about 2026 oversupply.























