WTI crude traded under steady pressure this week, slipping below $58 per barrel before recovering slightly into the Thanksgiving break. As of November 26, WTI sits near $58.65 and Brent trades around $63.04, with both benchmarks extending a month-long slide driven by supply concerns and geopolitical uncertainty. Prices are now down 5.45% over the past month and more than 15% compared to last year.
Geopolitics led every trading decision, with markets reacting sharply to reports that Ukraine had largely agreed to a peace proposal backed by the U.S. Traders interpreted the headlines as a potential precursor to easing sanctions on Russian energy exports — a scenario that could introduce materially larger supply volumes into an already heavy market.
Not all analysts are convinced a deal is imminent. UBS’s Giovanni Staunovo cautioned that Russia’s acceptance remains uncertain, a view echoed by nearly 20 traders surveyed by Bloomberg, most of whom said they do not expect rapid changes to Russian export flows. Even if a deal eventually firms up, many believe it would take time for barrels to reach global markets.
U.S. government data added further pressure. The latest EIA report showed a 2.774 million-barrel build in commercial crude inventories versus expectations for a 1.3 million-barrel draw. Stockpiles now stand at 426.9 million barrels, about 4% below the five-year average. Gasoline inventories also rose by 2.5 million barrels but remain 3% under the seasonal norm. The data reinforced the market’s sense of imbalance heading into year-end.
Supply expectations remain heavy. Eight OPEC+ members — including Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, and the UAE — confirmed a December 2025 adjustment of 137,000 barrels per day while pausing increases through the first quarter of 2026. The alliance meets November 30, and traders are preparing for discussions centered on how to manage an increasingly burdensome supply profile.
Major banks continue to lean bearish. Goldman Sachs projects a large surplus of roughly 2 million barrels per day through 2026 and expects Brent to average $56 and WTI $52 that year. Deutsche Bank sees no clear path back to deficits, while JP Morgan warns Brent could fall into the $30s by 2027 if supply growth persists.
Expectations for a Federal Reserve rate cut in December and newly effective U.S. sanctions on Russia’s largest oil firms have offered modest support, with refiners in India and China reducing Russian purchases. But optimism surrounding potential peace talks has overshadowed sanctions-related tightening.
Given the prospect of additional Russian supply, ongoing growth from the U.S., Brazil, and Guyana, and OPEC+ preparing to unwind cuts, the short-term outlook remains bearish. Trade will stay thin through the holiday, leaving the November 30 OPEC+ meeting as the next major catalyst.
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James Hyerczyk is a U.S. based seasoned technical analyst and educator with over 40 years of experience in market analysis and trading, specializing in chart patterns and price movement. He is the author of two books on technical analysis and has a background in both futures and stock markets.