WTI crude oil for February delivery closed down 2.00% on Wednesday, while RBOB gasoline slipped 0.36%, as the broader energy complex faced headwinds from an expanding global oil surplus. The decline pushed crude to a two-week low, reflecting mounting concerns about demand amid signals of robust worldwide oil supplies. This downturn coincided with the US Energy Department’s decision to selectively lift sanctions on Venezuelan crude exports, a move that threatens to inject additional barrels into already-saturated markets.
Venezuela’s Oil Enters the Global Fray
The Trump administration announced that Venezuelan interim authorities have agreed to supply as many as 50 million barrels of high-quality sanctioned oil to the United States. Venezuela, currently ranking twelfth among OPEC producers, holds significant crude reserves that could shift the global balance. Yet this development underscores an uncomfortable reality: the world likely has more oil than it needs. Morgan Stanley recently slashed its crude price forecasts, predicting Q1 2026 averages of $57.50 per barrel—down from $60—while cutting Q2 projections to $55 from $60, citing the expanding surplus scenario.
Mixed Signals from the EIA Weekly Report
Wednesday’s energy Information Administration inventory data revealed a complex picture. The headline drew attention when crude stockpiles fell by 3.83 million barrels, exceeding expectations of 1.0 million barrel draw. However, this positive signal was overshadowed by concerning demand metrics. Gasoline inventories surged 7.7 million barrels to a ten-month peak, far exceeding the anticipated 2.0 million barrel build, while US gasoline demand crashed to a one-year low of 8.17 million barrels per day. Distillate inventories similarly rose 5.59 million barrels against expectations of 1.1 million. For traders tracking EIA mid-month payment dates and regular inventory cycles, such volatile weekly swings underscore the importance of monitoring these releases closely for market direction.
Production Trends and the OPEC+ Pause
US crude output in the week ending January 2 edged down 0.1% week-over-week to 13.811 million barrels per day, hovering just below the record 13.862 million bpd set in November. Meanwhile, OPEC+ reiterated its commitment to pause production increases throughout Q1 2026, having previously outlined a modest December boost of 137,000 barrels per day. Yet with another 1.2 million bpd of production cuts still requiring restoration, the cartel faces mounting pressure to stabilize prices amid the surplus.
Geopolitical Disruptions Offer Limited Support
Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian refineries and tankers have disrupted export capabilities, while fresh US and EU sanctions on Russian oil infrastructure aim to constrain supply. This week, the market also absorbed news of the US seizing a Russian-flagged tanker over sanctions violations. These disruptions provide temporary props to prices, but they appear insufficient to counteract the gravitational pull of abundant supply. Vortexa data showed that crude stored on stationary tankers fell 3.4% week-over-week to 119.35 million barrels.
China’s Strength Against Broader Headwinds
A bright spot emerges from China, where December crude imports are poised to climb 10% month-over-month to a record 12.2 million barrels per day as the nation rebuilds reserves. This demand recovery demonstrates that Asian buying can still anchor prices, yet it appears insufficient to combat the structural surplus. The IEA forecasts a record global surplus of 4.0 million bpd in 2026, while OPEC recently revised its Q3 outlook from a deficit to a 500,000 bpd surplus—a striking reversal from the previous month’s -400,000 bpd deficit projection.
The Bottom Line: Supply Abundance Dominates the Narrative
Crude prices face headwinds as long as the global surplus narrative dominates. Wednesday’s rally in equity markets to new highs offered momentary support, hinting at underlying economic resilience, yet this optimism remains fragile. With sanctions on Venezuela poised to increase supply, OPEC+ holding production steady, and US output approaching record highs, the path of least resistance appears downward for crude until demand rebounds or supply discipline tightens considerably.
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Global Oil Surplus Weighs on Crude: WTI Slides on Venezuela Sanctions Rollback and Robust Supply Outlook
The Pressure Mounts from Supply Abundance
WTI crude oil for February delivery closed down 2.00% on Wednesday, while RBOB gasoline slipped 0.36%, as the broader energy complex faced headwinds from an expanding global oil surplus. The decline pushed crude to a two-week low, reflecting mounting concerns about demand amid signals of robust worldwide oil supplies. This downturn coincided with the US Energy Department’s decision to selectively lift sanctions on Venezuelan crude exports, a move that threatens to inject additional barrels into already-saturated markets.
Venezuela’s Oil Enters the Global Fray
The Trump administration announced that Venezuelan interim authorities have agreed to supply as many as 50 million barrels of high-quality sanctioned oil to the United States. Venezuela, currently ranking twelfth among OPEC producers, holds significant crude reserves that could shift the global balance. Yet this development underscores an uncomfortable reality: the world likely has more oil than it needs. Morgan Stanley recently slashed its crude price forecasts, predicting Q1 2026 averages of $57.50 per barrel—down from $60—while cutting Q2 projections to $55 from $60, citing the expanding surplus scenario.
Mixed Signals from the EIA Weekly Report
Wednesday’s energy Information Administration inventory data revealed a complex picture. The headline drew attention when crude stockpiles fell by 3.83 million barrels, exceeding expectations of 1.0 million barrel draw. However, this positive signal was overshadowed by concerning demand metrics. Gasoline inventories surged 7.7 million barrels to a ten-month peak, far exceeding the anticipated 2.0 million barrel build, while US gasoline demand crashed to a one-year low of 8.17 million barrels per day. Distillate inventories similarly rose 5.59 million barrels against expectations of 1.1 million. For traders tracking EIA mid-month payment dates and regular inventory cycles, such volatile weekly swings underscore the importance of monitoring these releases closely for market direction.
Production Trends and the OPEC+ Pause
US crude output in the week ending January 2 edged down 0.1% week-over-week to 13.811 million barrels per day, hovering just below the record 13.862 million bpd set in November. Meanwhile, OPEC+ reiterated its commitment to pause production increases throughout Q1 2026, having previously outlined a modest December boost of 137,000 barrels per day. Yet with another 1.2 million bpd of production cuts still requiring restoration, the cartel faces mounting pressure to stabilize prices amid the surplus.
Geopolitical Disruptions Offer Limited Support
Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian refineries and tankers have disrupted export capabilities, while fresh US and EU sanctions on Russian oil infrastructure aim to constrain supply. This week, the market also absorbed news of the US seizing a Russian-flagged tanker over sanctions violations. These disruptions provide temporary props to prices, but they appear insufficient to counteract the gravitational pull of abundant supply. Vortexa data showed that crude stored on stationary tankers fell 3.4% week-over-week to 119.35 million barrels.
China’s Strength Against Broader Headwinds
A bright spot emerges from China, where December crude imports are poised to climb 10% month-over-month to a record 12.2 million barrels per day as the nation rebuilds reserves. This demand recovery demonstrates that Asian buying can still anchor prices, yet it appears insufficient to combat the structural surplus. The IEA forecasts a record global surplus of 4.0 million bpd in 2026, while OPEC recently revised its Q3 outlook from a deficit to a 500,000 bpd surplus—a striking reversal from the previous month’s -400,000 bpd deficit projection.
The Bottom Line: Supply Abundance Dominates the Narrative
Crude prices face headwinds as long as the global surplus narrative dominates. Wednesday’s rally in equity markets to new highs offered momentary support, hinting at underlying economic resilience, yet this optimism remains fragile. With sanctions on Venezuela poised to increase supply, OPEC+ holding production steady, and US output approaching record highs, the path of least resistance appears downward for crude until demand rebounds or supply discipline tightens considerably.