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WTI Trades the Range as Supply Growth Caps Geopolitical Upside | Investing.com

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February 13, 2026
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WTI Trades the Range as Supply Growth Caps Geopolitical Upside | Investing.com

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West Texas Intermediate WTI (CL=F) trades around $63.50, down about 1.75% on the day, after slipping from the upper 60s. Brent (BZ=F) changes hands near $68.21, off roughly 1.7%, with the whole crude complex fading from the early-month geopolitical pop and rotating back into a heavy, range-bound structure. Short-term, the tape is telling you this is a market digesting a volatility shock, not yet a new sustained trend.

On the daily chart, WTI (CL=F) keeps oscillating inside a tight band, with roughly $62 as a floor and the $66 zone as the primary ceiling. That $62 region lines up with the 200-day moving average, so every dip into the low 60s finds buyers defending the longer-term trend line. The upper edge around $66 repeatedly rejects attempts to grind higher, turning that level into the key near-term roadblock. As long as price is pinned between those two levels, this is a range market where short-term participants fade strength near $66 and accumulate near $62, instead of chasing breakouts that are not confirmed.

For Brent (BZ=F), the structure is similar but shifted higher. Price trades closer to the top of its band, with $70 acting as psychological resistance and a clean technical pivot. A sustained push above $71 would open air toward $73, but the market has not validated that move yet. On the downside, the 200-day moving average sits around $66.40–$66.50, offering dynamic support. The pattern is a classic squeeze: as long as Brent oscillates between the high-60s support and low-70s resistance, directional conviction stays low and the dominant strategy is to trade the band, not to price in a trend that isn’t there on the chart.

The range is not random; it reflects how the market is hedging Middle East risk. Talks between the United States and Iran keep toggling between “possible compromise” headlines and warnings about potential escalation. When the narrative leans toward an agreement, traders price in a lower risk premium on flows through the Strait of Hormuz, leaning on the $62–$63 support in WTI (CL=F) and the mid-60s in Brent (BZ=F). When the tone shifts back to threats of added U.S. carrier groups and fears of supply disruption, the market pushes again at $66 WTI and $70 Brent, trying to build a breakout that so far fails to hold.

If you get a clean US–Iran deal reducing the probability of a Hormuz disruption, the band likely resolves lower, with WTI (CL=F) sliding toward the high-50s and Brent (BZ=F) into the low-60s. If negotiations break down or the region takes a kinetic turn, the market will attempt another fast repricing to the upside, with Brent testing into the low-70s and WTI back toward the upper-60s or even $70 in a risk-off spike.

On the U.S. light-sweet benchmark, the early-February rally pushed XTI/USD (WTI dollar chart) above the 4 February swing high, logging the strongest level since the start of the month. That move has all the hallmarks of a bull trap rather than the start of a trend. After marginally taking out resistance, price printed a bearish engulfing reversal candle, signalling that late buyers at the top are now trapped and vulnerable to a flush lower.

From a level-by-level perspective, the market is still trading within an ascending channel, but momentum has rotated from bulls to bears in the short term. The $65 region, flagged earlier as the key barrier for sustained upside, now looks heavy, while $64.40 has flipped into the first local support. A decisive break under $64.40 would confirm that the failed breakout is driving a deeper move toward the lower boundary of the channel, putting the $62–$63 area back into focus as the next downside magnet.

Several macro desks and bank analysts have already flagged today’s WTI (CL=F) levels as stretched relative to the fundamental supply-demand balance. Their base case, assuming geopolitical tensions cool rather than escalate, is a drift lower toward the $57–$59 range. That zone marries two ideas: it is close to the lower edge of the current ascending channel, and it reflects a market where persistent oversupply and heavy inventories finally overpower the remaining risk premium.

Those projection bands are not timing tools, but they show the direction model-driven flows will press if the next big catalyst is easing rather than escalation. As soon as traders believe Hormuz risk is capped and OPEC+ discipline will hold, passive and systematic flows start leaning toward those high-50s equilibrium targets.

On the consumption side, the macro backdrop is modest rather than explosive. Global oil demand in 2026 is projected to grow by around 850,000 barrels per day, only slightly above the 770,000 barrels per day increase recorded last year. The growth is concentrated entirely in non-OECD economies, with China contributing roughly 200,000 barrels per day in both 2025 and 2026, well below its trend of the last decade. Petrochemical feedstocks drive more than half of this year’s demand increment; transport fuels, which dominated growth in 2025, lose relative importance.

That profile matters: a demand curve anchored in petrochemicals and emerging markets is more stable but less explosive than a broad-based, travel-driven surge. It gives the market a floor but not a strong enough impulse to absorb big supply gains without some price pressure.

On the supply side, the picture is clearly heavier. After jumping nearly 3.1 million barrels per day in 2025, global output is forecast to climb another 2.4 million barrels per day in 2026, lifting total production to about 108.6 million barrels per day. That growth is split roughly 50/50 between OPEC+ and non-OPEC+ producers, with both groups adding capacity.

January already showed how volatile that supply can be. Severe North American winter storms knocked more than 1 million barrels per day of production offline temporarily, while Kazakh exports were constrained by outages at key terminals and a power failure at the country’s largest field. Russian flows dropped about 350,000 barrels per day as sanctions and political pressure forced refiners – especially in India, where imports slid to 1.1 million barrels per day versus an average 1.7 million barrels per day in 2025 – to diversify away from Moscow barrels. Venezuelan output fell 210,000 barrels per day to 780,000 barrels per day, although new licenses will let U.S.-linked companies lift more barrels later.

Once those temporary disruptions wash out, the forward path is still one of net supply growth. OPEC+ has kept existing quotas in place through March, but even within those limits there is spare capacity – Saudi Arabia alone sits on more than 1.8 million barrels per day of effective spare, and total OPEC spare capacity exceeds 3.5 million barrels per day. That capacity acts as an overhang: it caps how far prices can run before the temptation to open taps becomes too strong.

The inventory story is unambiguously bearish for WTI (CL=F) and Brent (BZ=F) medium term. In 2025, observed global oil stocks swelled by an extraordinary 477 million barrels, or about 1.3 million barrels per day, a build rate last seen in 2020 during the pandemic shock. Chinese crude oil stocks alone increased by 111 million barrels, while oil on water – cargoes still on tankers – rose by 248 million barrels, with sanctioned crude accounting for roughly 72% of that increment.

OECD industry stocks moved higher as well, registering a counter-seasonal build of about 3.9 million barrels in December, pushing levels above their five-year average for the first time since 2021. Preliminary data point to another 49 million barrels added worldwide in January 2026. That scale of storage accumulation acts like a buffer: every time prices jump, those barrels become candidates for release, tempering the upside and encouraging contango structures in the forward curve rather than a violent backwardation spike.

Despite heavy stocks, benchmark grades rallied sharply in January. Dated Brent added roughly $10 per barrel over the month, and physical markets tightened enough to move the tape toward $73 before easing slightly. At the moment, futures trade near $70 as crude balances the inventory overhang against the genuine risk that a misstep in the Persian Gulf constrains flows through a chokepoint that carries around 20% of global consumption.

In other words, the fundamental fair value level based on supply, demand, and stocks is probably lower than spot, but the risk premium linked to Hormuz, Russian exports, and weather-driven outages is keeping a floor under WTI (CL=F) in the low-60s and Brent (BZ=F) in the high-60s.

Energy is interconnected, and the LNG tape is sending its own signals. Europe continues to import record volumes of liquefied gas to cover winter demand, with storage levels slipping into the mid-20% to mid-30% range in key countries like France and Germany while Russian pipeline gas is being phased out. Cargoes are even being re-exported from China to Europe in rare flows, underlining how tight certain regional balances are.

However, the crude market is not as squeezed as LNG. The massive oil stock builds, spare OPEC+ capacity and the relatively slow pace of demand growth argue against a structural oil shortage in 2026. Gas-related price spikes can bleed into refined products and sentiment, but they do not override the crude supply cushion unless another large disruption hits.

The global economy adds another layer of risk for WTI (CL=F) and Brent (BZ=F). With oil demand growth limited to around 850,000 barrels per day, any downside surprises to global GDP, industrial production or freight volumes can quickly erode that number. Transport fuels no longer dominate the incremental barrel; instead, petrochemicals and emerging-market consumption carry the load. That makes growth less sensitive to tourism shocks, but it remains very sensitive to industrial slowdowns and credit stress in China or other large non-OECD economies.

On the other hand, central banks have some room to ease policy if growth weakens, supporting risk assets and, indirectly, oil. The balance of probabilities still favours modest demand growth, not a collapse, but it gives you a clear message: crude is not in a demand-driven secular bull, so any sustained price strength must come from supply discipline or geopolitics, not from runaway consumption.

From a positioning standpoint, speculative longs in WTI (CL=F) have been shaken out by the volatility around earnings, macro headlines and the Iran–U.S. narrative. Momentum indicators like RSI dipped into oversold territory on some weekly charts, with values in the high-20s before rebounding, indicating that forced selling has already hit. On the higher-timeframe weekly view, there is a key support cluster around the 200-week moving average near $52.70, which marks the lower medium-term risk zone flagged in several institutional notes.

If the market sees a genuine macro and geopolitical easing – Iran talks succeed, no new Russian supply shock, OPEC+ discipline holds but spare capacity remains unused – a glide path toward $57–$59 for WTI and low-60s for Brent is plausible, with $52.70 as the extreme downside line to monitor for a genuine regime shift. Above that line, the structure remains a noisy mean-reversion environment, not a collapse.

Pulling all of this together – current prices around $63.50 for WTI (CL=F) and $68.21 for Brent (BZ=F), the $62–$66 and mid-60s to low-70s trading bands, 2.4 million barrels per day of extra supply coming in 2026, 477 million barrels of stocks added in 2025, continued stock builds in January, and a relatively soft +0.85 million barrels per day demand growth profile – the market is clearly not in a structural bull run. It is an oversupplied market supported by a risk premium and occasional supply outages.

On that basis, the clean categorisation at today’s levels is:

At $63–$64 WTI and high-60s Brent, you are close enough to the lower half of the range to justify buying dips for a move back toward $66–$70, using the $62 WTI and mid-60s Brent zones as risk lines. The upside skew is capped by spare capacity and heavy inventories, so this is not a call for a runaway rally toward $90+, but the combination of geopolitical risk, recent weather-driven outages and modest demand growth supports a bullish tilt over the next leg inside the band.

For longer-term positioning, the oversupply and storage build argue for a Hold stance rather than aggressive accumulation at any price. The better structural entry would be closer to the high-50s in WTI (CL=F) and low-60s in Brent (BZ=F) if the Iran premium fades and OPEC+ keeps adding barrels. Until then, the market remains a tradeable range with a buy-the-dip bias near the current lows, not a place to chase momentum at resistance.

That’s TradingNEWS.com

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