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Oil Price News: Why WTI Is Set Up for a $65 Squeeze

By
Tim Duggan
Updated: Jan 26, 2026, 12:38 GMT+00:00

Key Points:

  • Specs are trapped short, laying setup for a WTI squeeze toward $65.
  • The “glut” is quietly draining – Venezuela and floating storage are putting onshore inventories in focus.
  • Short-term catalysts are Iran risk, polar vortex and behavior of structural buyers (China/India).
Natural Gas, WTI Oil, Brent Oil Forecasts

This week’s tape is about a market that’s quietly tightening while everyone’s still trading the “glut” headline.

Specs came in max short and have started puking just as Iran risk, a Venezuelan draw on floating barrels, and a polar vortex knocking US production all hit at once. China keeps stockpiling, India keeps buying cheap Russian barrels, and EIA’s surplus story is increasingly parked offshore rather than on visible tanks.

I’m leaning into a WTI squeeze toward $65, trading long against the $60 area and letting Wednesday inventory prints and Iran headlines provide the fuel.

Why Oil Matters for the Fed

On Greenland, Denmark and Sweden simply sold approx $8bln of US paper by the time Trump took the stage in Davos. He then capitulated and on Friday put out a statement saying that if Europe continued to sell US treasuries, that he was going to go ballistic and unleash the fury. Well, I think he was gently reminded who owns close to 10% of all US debt.

Now, back to energy.

Oil prices in my view are set to accelerate hard. Given that the Specs are getting further squeezed out of their positions, we then look at rising tensions AGAIN in Iran and a nice Polar Vortex freezing producing assets in North America. This will then lead to a short term spike in inflation if we get WTI back over $62’s. With that spike, I doubt the Fed will be hoodwinked into more rate cuts. So just keep an eye on this picture.

A Look at the RIC Market

China continues to build oil, Gold and steel stocks.

Onshore inventories in China, particularly in Shandong, remain well above the usual seasonal range. Source: Vortexa

India continues to buy non-sanctioned Russian discounted oil. And just like with every other US administration- sanctions don’t always work as planned.

India has become one of the largest buyers of Russian oil since the conflict in Ukraine began, with exports now ranging from 3 to 4.5 million barrels per day.

A Shift in the Narrative: No More Glut

“Oil glut predictions are seriously exaggerated… Oil stocks are low across the world on a five-year average ‍and barrels offshore are mostly sanctioned barrels,”

-Amin Nasser, chief executive at Aramco

Although the levels of global crude oil stored on tankers at sea are still well above the seasonal norm, a decline has now been observed. Source: Vortexa

Trumps ordering of 50 million barrels of Venezuelan oil to the US is certainly a drawdown for the Glut, and while not a wild descent, we can certainly see a diminishing level of Crude/Condensate at sea. Overall, the 50mb is 33% of current glut. It will take a number of weeks if not months for all 50mb to land, but the floating glut will drain significantly. Valero & Phillips 66 set to take Venezuela shipments with a nice $5 net margin after the sweetheart discount of about $9.20 from Brent price.

The anticipation is WHEN will onshore storage and utilization increase meaningfully- reflecting the landings of the glut. Here is what EIA has to say:

There are signs increasing volumes of oil are accumulating in transit on the water or in floating storage, which have begun to weigh on oil prices. However, the excess supply that we estimate built up last year has not yet been fully reflected in observable inventories of crude oil such as those at storage hubs in Cushing, Oklahoma, or the U.S. Gulf Coast. We expect that lower near-term oil prices relative to those for oil deliveries further in the future (in other words, contango market structure) will encourage market participants to begin to store crude oil on land until supply and demand imbalances moderate and inventory builds decrease.

-EIA Jan monthly report.

Onshore inventories tell another story, keeping close to the average and upward sloping. Source: Vortexa

And this is when they expect inventories to start to look a bit thinner? Q2/3 2026. Basically, there is a lot of oil on floating storage waiting for higher prices.

So to close off on this Supply/Demand picture. We have to be vigilant when trading front of curve. It will be sensitive to these landings as appear on EIA weekly storage numbers each Wednesday. A high frequency data point that is a fixture on any oil traders week. It has been largely insignificant and a non-tradable event over the last 6 months. It should come back into focus through end Q1 as we see some landings and volatility to match. I may bring back the weekly table on the top of the report then.

Geopolitics Don’t Matter Anymore

I don’t want to spend too much time on this. I just want to say this: Take the Russian invasion, the Oct 7th Israel attack, the June 2025 12-day war, the snatching of Maduro. None of this volatility lasted more than a week of high prices. The 12 day war was priced in and then out within 5-10 trading days. Should we get heightened tensions in Iran- a ground attack, a closure of the straits-we should expect the same. After it gets priced out, that is when the swing trades get awesome. Be it holding short spreads or initiating longs from a post rally established range low.

Weather Forecasts in the Spotlight

The polar vortex acts like a cylindrical wall around the cold air around the northern ice cap. When it gets disrupted, it allows that cold air system to escape and bleed lower into the northern and mid-Northern Hemisphere. What’s crazy is that this vortex event was identified 2 months ago. The impact on front month futures for both oil and gas is high- 23% up in a week in Natty. Specs were mega short.

‘’U.S. crude output is declining as severe winter weather forces operators to shut in production, with losses potentially exceeding 300,000 barrels per day (bpd), say analysts and regulators. The cold snap is freezing wellheads in key areas, with significant impact in the Permian Basin and a 5-10% drop in North Dakota output’’

-Energy Aspects via Reuters Jan 24th.

Commitment Of Traders Report

Please do go back and look at my COT analysis from 2 weeks ago– There are a few reasons- but the largest is the regime change that I noted back then. This is like the 50yr wave from Point break (the original with Keanu and Patrick Swayze- not the remake abomination).

Share

  • Open interest: -54,430. Total 1,964359. Prior: 2,018,789.
  • Commercials Long: -33,510. -3.92%. 81st percentile.
  • Commercial Short -1,913. -0.21%. Total 918,850. 44th percentile.
  • Non Comm Long -1,327. -0.46%. Total 284,809. 20th percentile.
  • Non Comm Short -21,991. -9.64%. Total 206,017. 92nd percentile. PUKE!

It is with great delight I got to see the new spec COT positioning on Friday. Endorsing what we observed in the Duggan Capital trading room this week. I came into the week with the hypo that SPECS at 98.1% short would puke. I could see this on the book Friday-relatively large size (200-400) lots coming in and trading on the bid at market-without selling pressure and delta not rising through that auction. Once this volume was deployed, then we moved higher, with higher positive cumulative delta.

How do you get out of a ton of contracts on the book? Slowly and carefully on the bid.

Commercials

Not much to report, other than they actually dropped shorts 0.21%/ 1,913 contracts. When commercials are afraid of prices dropping – THEY SELL MORE, NOT LESS.

Non Commercials/ Specs

This is what the start of puking a large position looks like on C.O.T.

On a z-score basis, the WOW change was a shift of an entire deviation from +1.77 last week to negative 1.55 this week gone.

You ever YOLO a short position and it move up in your face? Well, specs have been so short this, they are going to have to purchase back at higher and higher prices to get out.

We are heavy long on oil in Duggan Capital, with a view that the specs stepping back will lead to a short squeeze. It is my belief we go to $65. As you can see, there is a BIG RED area of resistance above-about $61.51 to $63.40s. This area is the lows of Aug and Nov 2021.

As this point, I ask that you go back 2 weeks ago now and look at the COT section in the report ‘Squeeze Now’. I observed that the last time we were at these spec levels and they had to puke, it led to a rally of +$24 on front month prices. The data is there to support the thesis.

So here is what I’m looking for this week on oil.

As we have the overhang of ‘what is Donald going to do in Iran?’, we have to remain tight aggressive at the levels below. Trade onto top of green area $60.18, I’m going to want to get long if the order flow supports it. I’ll take my stop below $60 handle-preferring to see a small washout first, then go long $60 or $60.18s. The market may open gap up- depending on the overnight news flows. In which case, I’ll be playing the ‘waiting for a pullback’ game.

Intraday trade wise- I’m willing to pay up the market if we get to $63s- meaning I’ll buy a higher pullback. QPVAH $60.91s. There are really 2 execution strategies at play now. Playing long/short intraday and playing long swings on spreads.

As usual, these charts are not what I expect to happen on price, but if the markets sets up as per the first move on the chart, that is the trade plan I am executing. I am not predicting price, I am trading an edge of:

  1. Context (value high/low and market balance)
  2. Condition (Average volume & prices paid)
  3. Macro COT fades

If you want to learn how to trade like this, give me a shout.

As always, waiting is trading. Trading is waiting.

About the Author

Tim Duggan is a commodities trader with more than 20 years of experience. He focuses on crude oil and energy spreads, combining technical tools with macro and fundamental analysis. He runs a private fund and writes The VWAP Report and The Oil Report newsletters — both widely read by institutional players and energy professionals.

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