prices are firm but structurally constrained, with the market signaling that supply conditions, not headlines, remain the dominant force. The recent move higher in oil has been driven largely by positioning around potential instability in the Middle East rather than evidence of disrupted physical flows. In a market that is well supplied for 2025, risk premiums can lift prices temporarily, but without barrels coming offline, sustained upside momentum is difficult to justify.
Front-month WTI futures rose 0.9% to $66.93 per barrel, while front-month gained 0.9% to $72.11 per barrel. The parallel advance reflects short-term geopolitical hedging rather than a shift in underlying balances. Inventories and production levels continue to provide a buffer, limiting the probability of a decisive breakout above the current range. Price action suggests traders are willing to pay for optionality, but not yet for scarcity.
For a durable rally to take hold, the market would need to see a significant and prolonged loss of supply that materially alters the global balance. Absent that, rallies are likely to encounter selling pressure as producers and consumers hedge into strength. Macro inputs, including U.S. economic data, may inject short-term volatility, particularly through demand expectations, but their impact is expected to be secondary to physical supply dynamics.
The base case remains a range-bound market anchored by adequate supply and episodic geopolitical premiums. The primary risk scenario is a sustained disruption that removes meaningful volumes from the market, forcing a repricing of forward balances. Until such evidence emerges, investors should view moves toward the upper end of the range as tactical rather than structural, with positioning driven more by sentiment than by fundamentals.





















































