Futures

Oil News: Iran Supply Risk Could Drive Crude Oil Futures Rally Next Week

Inventory Data Crushes the Rally Attempt

By midweek, the API numbers landed: crude inventories up 2.4 million barrels, gasoline up 3.1 million. The EIA made it worse — 3.6 million barrels of crude added, 4.2 million in gasoline. Those aren’t rounding errors. That’s oversupply in action. Gasoline stocks climbing toward the top of their five-year range told you refinery demand for crude was soft and product markets were saturated.

Adding to the bearish tone, Russia-Ukraine diplomacy chatter surfaced. Nothing concrete, but even hints of progress suggested Russian crude could keep flowing. Traders trimmed their geopolitical longs. Meanwhile, China doubts lingered in the background. By Thursday, Trump backed off tariff threats against Europe and ruled out military action over Greenland. Oil dropped 2%.

Kazakhstan Fire Keeps 700,000 Barrels Per Day Offline

Kazakhstan adds to the bullish case. Chevron confirmed Tengiz oilfield — nearly half of Kazakhstan’s production — remains offline after Monday’s fire. JP Morgan estimates Kazakhstan’s crude output could average just 1.0 to 1.1 million barrels per day in January versus the usual 1.8 million. And the Black Sea export gateway is damaged from Ukrainian drone strikes, creating bottlenecks even when production comes back.

Friday Flips the Script: Warships, Sanctions, and “Finger on the Trigger”

Then Friday happened. Trump ratcheted up pressure on Iran with new sanctions targeting nine vessels and eight firms transporting Iranian oil. An armada — aircraft carrier, guided-missile destroyers — is heading to the Middle East. Trump renewed warnings to Tehran against killing protesters or restarting its nuclear program.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard responded over the weekend, saying they’re “more ready than ever, finger on the trigger.”

Looking Ahead: Iran Holds 3.2 Million Barrels Per Day Hostage

The forecast centers on actual supply disruption risk — not just headlines. Iran produces 3.2 million barrels per day and is OPEC’s fourth-largest producer. It’s also a major exporter to China. If U.S. military action materializes or Iran retaliates by disrupting exports, the supply premium snaps back hard. Buyers would step in fast.

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