January WTI crude oil (CLF26) on Monday closed down -1.20 (-2.00%), and January RBOB gasoline (RBF26) closed down -0.0360 (-1.96%).
Crude oil and gasoline prices fell sharply on Monday, with gasoline posting a 1.5-week low. Dollar strength on Monday undercut energy prices. Crude prices also fell as Monday’s stock market weakness weighed on confidence in the economic outlook and energy demand. A positive for crude prices is the expectation that restrictions on Russian energy exports will remain, following Ukrainian President Zelenskiy’s statement that there is no accord yet to end the Russian-Ukrainian war.
On the bearish side for crude, Saudi Arabian state producer Aramco last Thursday cut the price of its Arab Light crude oil for Asian customers by 30 cents/bbl for January delivery, the lowest since January 2021, a sign of weakened energy demand.
Geopolitical risks are supporting crude prices. Last Tuesday, Interfax reported that Russian President Putin threatened to attack ships from nations helping Ukraine if attacks on Russian vessels don’t stop. Recently, four Russian tankers have been attacked by drones in the Black Sea. Also, President Trump said airspace over Venezuela should be considered closed and that the US may soon start targeting drug cartels within Venezuela. Venezuela is the world’s 12th-largest oil producer.
Reduced crude exports from Russia are underpinning crude prices. On November 19, Vortexa data showed Russia’s oil product shipments fell to 1.7 million bpd in the first 15 days of November, the lowest in more than 3 years. Ukraine has targeted at least 28 Russian refineries over the past three months, exacerbating a fuel crunch in Russia and limiting Russia’s crude export capabilities. Ukrainian drone and missile attacks over the weekend damaged a Russian Baltic Sea oil terminal, forcing it to close. The Caspian Pipeline Consortium, which carries 1.6 million bpd of Kazakhstan’s crude exports, was forced to close after a pipeline was damaged at one of its moorings. New US and EU sanctions on Russian oil companies, infrastructure, and tankers have also curbed Russian oil exports.
Crude also garnered support after OPEC+ on Sunday said it will stick with plans to pause production increases during Q1 of 2026. OPEC+ at its November 2 meeting announced that members will raise production by +137,000 bpd in December but will then pause the production hikes in Q1-2026 due to the emerging global oil surplus. The IEA in mid-October forecasted a record global oil surplus of 4.0 million bpd for 2026. OPEC+ is trying to restore all of the 2.2 million bpd production cut it made in early 2024, but still has another 1.2 million bpd of production left to restore. OPEC’s November crude production fell by -10,000 bpd to 29.09 million bpd.















