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02.07.2026 08:16 AM
Oil Market Denouement: Will Brent Crash to $50 or Return to $100 in 2026–2027?

Executive Summary: Where Are Oil Prices Heading?

Benchmarks for Brent crude demonstrate a steady downward trend, hitting local lows around $70–$73 per barrel. Following short-lived spikes, the market entered a prolonged decline due to a sharp easing of the geopolitical premium and a shifting supply-demand balance. Investors are pricing in a systemic crude surplus that will exert powerful downward pressure on the market in the coming quarters.

Key Pressure Factors:

Geopolitical De-escalation and Open Logistics Corridors: Reaching preliminary diplomatic agreements in the Middle East and the actual restoration of safe transit through key maritime straits have sharply reduced the risk premium. Crude flows are recovering faster than initially expected, which has eliminated local supply crunches and stripped buyers of their main catalyst for growth.

Surging Non-OPEC+ Supply Surplus: The global market faces a massive production increase from countries not bound by quotas and restrictions. Aggressive output growth in the US, Brazil, and Guyana completely offsets voluntary cuts made by the cartels. The situation is compounded by the fact that commercial crude inventories in developed nations have stopped declining, forcing refineries to rely solely on current excess volumes.

Structural Demand Decline in Asia: The main engine of global crude consumption is visibly slowing down. The energy transition, accelerated adoption of alternative energy sources, and the explosive rise of the EV market share in major Asian economies mean that fuel consumption volumes are tracking significantly worse than conservative macroeconomic forecasts. Roughly 10–12% of the overall drop in refined product demand is already being called an irreversible structural shift.

Outlook: Will Brent Return to $100 or Crash to $50 in 2026–2027?

Answer: A return to $100 is completely off the table; the risks of a drop toward $55–$60 are becoming real.

The current supply glut and the structural cooling of global demand have temporarily blocked the path to a bull market. In the medium term, price dynamics will be split into two stages:

2026 Horizon (Bearish Drift): Until the end of the year, quotes will remain under constant pressure. Even if key producers extend current output limits, Brent prices risk sliding into a $68–$74 per barrel range amid seasonal demand drops during the autumn-winter period. The market will attempt to find psychological support, but there are no catalysts for a reversal.

2027 Horizon (Overproduction Risk): The period of peak output expansion by independent producers will coincide with a further drop in traditional fuel consumption. In the first half of 2027, the market will face a critical surplus. If exporters launch local price wars for market share, Brent quotes will test the $58–$65 per barrel levels, and under a worst-case scenario, they will approach the $53 mark in the second half of the year.

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