Crude Oil Radar

2026-03-24 23:54

Table of Contents

Brian's Thoughts

Published: 03/24/2026 Focus: Crude Oil
Crude has shifted from a surplus-driven market to a logistics-driven one, ripping from $67 to $119 as ~20% of global flows through the Strait of Hormuz were threatened, despite underlying fundamentals still pointing to a ~3.7 mbpd surplus and U.S. production near 13.7 mbpd. Prices are now stabilizing in the $90–$100 range as some cargoes move again and workarounds like Saudi Red Sea exports (~3.8 mbpd) help offset disruption, but the system remains fragile. The Brent-WTI spread near $13–$15 is the market’s clearest signal that this is a global transport issue, not a domestic supply shortage. Strategic reserve releases (~400 million barrels) provide temporary relief but only equate to ~2–3 mbpd, far short of a sustained Hormuz disruption. The key risk is a shift from delayed shipments to actual upstream supply loss, with early signs of ~6% production cuts and force majeure events emerging in the region. Watch real tanker flows through Hormuz, the Brent-WTI spread, Saudi rerouting volumes, signs of upstream shut-ins, and any policy shift on Iranian barrels, because the market will quickly swing between scarcity pricing and surplus reality depending on which side gains traction. WTI traded all the way down to 84.37 on news that Trump announced "successful" talks with Iran on de-escalation. After absorbing that, WTI rebounded to low 90s as traders shift to deciphering what damage has been done and what that means as demand destruction and long term impacts are still unknown. Brent followed suit trading down to 96.25 before rebounding to 105-106 as traders are trying to understand the long term implications of where we may go. * Monday was quite the roller coaster with Trump de-escalating and claiming victory which has sent crude down to the mid-80s. The de-escalation was from a reprieve of the 48 hour deadline to open the Strait of Hormuz and second statement was declaring victory on regime change in Iran. * Tuesday - well what a roller coaster after claims from Trump that talks were going well and Iran denied talks taking place. Whispers from Qatar and Pakistan is that there is hope for peace - while military experts say that the pieces are being moved in for escalation. One thing is clear - we are going to see 120 or 76 - question is which one first or both?

Today's Update

Updated: 2026-03-24 23:47:10 Length: 573 chars
Crude oil has transformed from a surplus to a logistics-driven market, soaring from $67 to $119 amid threats to the Strait of Hormuz, despite a ~3.7 mbpd surplus. Currently stabilizing between $90–$100, the Brent-WTI spread indicates global transport issues rather than domestic supply concerns. With strategic reserve releases providing only temporary relief, the market remains sensitive to shifts in upstream supply and geopolitical developments. Watch for tanker flows, production cuts, and policy changes as the market navigates between scarcity and surplus realities.

Market Summary

Technical Outlook

Moderately Bullish
Score: 3/5
Short: BUY | Medium: SELL | Long: BUY

International Prices

Brent: $99.94 $12.25
WTI: $88.13 $10.1
Spread: $11.81 (Brent premium of $11.81)

Key Fundamentals

Crude Stocks: N/A (0)
Net Imports: N/A (0)

News Sentiment

BEARISH

Spec Positioning

Net Position: 96,371
Weekly Change: 4,249

Technical Analysis

Overall Technical Score (-5 to +5): 3 (Moderately Bullish)
Current Price: $89.11
Signal: Moderately Bullish

Moving Averages (9/20)

BULLISH

MA(9): $94.69

MA(20): $85.38

Current Price is 89.11, 9 day MA 94.69, 20 day MA 85.38

MACD (12, 26, 9)

BEARISH

MACD: 6.9662

Signal: 7.4553

Days since crossover: 1

MACD crossed the line 1 days ago and is in a bearish setup

RSI (14)

NEUTRAL

Value: 57.05

Category: NEUTRAL

RSI is 57.05 (note 70% is overbought and 30% is oversold)

Volume (vs 20d Avg)

LOWER

Current: 40,633

Avg (20d): 554,806

Ratio: 0.07

Volume is lower versus 20 day average

Stochastic (14, 3)

BEARISH CROSS

%K: 31.77

%D: 40.26

Stochastic %K: 31.77, %D: 40.26. Signal: bearish cross

ADX (14)

STRONG UPTREND

ADX: 58.88

+DI: 30.22

-DI: 10.76

ADX: 58.88 (+DI: 30.22, -DI: 10.76). Trend: strong uptrend

Williams %R (14)

NEUTRAL

Value: -68.23

Williams %R: -68.23 (neutral zone)

Bollinger Bands (20, 2)

ABOVE MIDDLE

Upper: 108.24

Middle: 85.38

Lower: 62.53

Price vs BBands (20, 2): above middle. Upper: 108.24, Middle: 85.38, Lower: 62.53

Fundamental Analysis

Category Current Last Week Last Year 3 Yr Avg
Crude Production (Thousand Barrels a Day) 13668.0 13678.0 13575.0 12991.0
Crude Imports (Thousand Barrels a Day) 7194.0 6422.0 5470.0 5945.0
Crude Exports (Thousand Barrels a Day) 4898.0 3434.0 3290.0 4819.0
Refinery Inputs (Thousand Barrels a Day) 16232.0 16169.0 15708.0 15608.0
Net Imports (Thousand Barrels a Day) 2296.0 2988.0 2180.0 1126.0
Commercial Crude Stocks (Thousand Barrels) 449259.0 443103.0 435223.0 454396.67
Crude & Products Total Stocks (Thousand Barrels) 1682813.0 1682368.0 1594870.0 1596865.0
Gasoline Stocks (Thousand Barrels) 244040.0 249476.0 241101.0 233648.33
Distillate Stocks (Thousand Barrels) 116904.0 119431.0 117595.0 116569.0

International Price Analysis

International Price Summary

Brent crude (MAY 26) settled at $99.94, change $-12.25. WTI crude (MAY 26) settled at $88.13, change $-10.1. The Brent-WTI spread is currently $11.81 (Brent premium of $11.81). The Brent-WTI spread reflects differences in global vs. U.S. supply/demand dynamics, geopolitics, and transportation costs.

Brent Crude

$99.94
12.25
(MAY 26)

WTI Crude

$88.13
10.1
(MAY 26)

Brent-WTI Spread

$11.81
Brent premium of $11.81

OPEC Analysis

Supply-Demand Balance

Supply-Demand Balance Chart

China Oil Demand Trend

China Demand Chart

India Oil Demand Trend

India Demand Chart

United States Oil Demand Trend

US Demand Chart

Year-over-Year Market Analysis

Year-over-Year Comparison Chart

OPEC Countries Production

OPEC Production Grid Chart
Data Sources Used: Supply Balance China Data India Data US Data
OPEC Data Last Updated: 2026-03-08 12:04 (395.8 hours ago)
World Demand
105.14
mb/d
OECD / Non-OECD
OECD: 45.97
Non-OECD: 59.17
Asia Giants
China: 16.86
India: 5.66
Supply Gap
42.47
mb/d
DoC Required

OPEC Market Analysis

Crude Oil Price Movements

In January, the OPEC Reference Basket (ORB) value rose by $0.61/b, month-on-month (m-o-m), to average $62.31/b. The ICE Brent front-month contract increased by $3.10/b, m-o-m, to average $64.73/b, while the NYMEX WTI front-month contract rose by $2.39/b, m-o-m, to average $60.26/b. The GME Oman front-month contract also saw an increase of $0.83/b, m-o-m, to average $62.79/b.

The Brent–WTI front-month spread rose by $0.71/b, m-o-m, to average $4.47/b. The forward curves of all major crude benchmarks strengthened, with the front end of the curves for both ICE Brent and NYMEX WTI moving into stronger backwardation. This shift was supported by oil supply outages, easing selling pressure from speculators, and robust physical market fundamentals. Speculative sentiment turned bullish, with hedge funds and other money managers sharply increasing their net long positions.

World Economy & Macroeconomic Backdrop

The global economic growth forecasts remain unchanged from last month’s assessment at 3.1% in 2026 and 3.2% in 2027. The US economic growth forecast is revised up slightly to 2.2% for 2026, but remains at 2% for 2027. In the Eurozone, the economic growth forecasts remain at 1.2% for both 2026 and 2027. Japan’s economic growth forecasts remain at 0.9% for both 2026 and 2027. The economic growth forecasts for China remain at 4.5% for both 2026 and 2027. India’s economic growth forecasts remain at 6.6% for 2026 and 6.5% for 2027. Brazil’s economic growth forecasts remain at 2.0% for 2026 and 2.2% for 2027. Russia’s economic growth forecasts remain at 1.3% for 2026 and 1.5% for 2027.

World Oil Demand Trends

The global oil demand growth forecast for 2026 remains at 1.4 mb/d, year-on-year (y-o-y), unchanged from last month’s assessment. The OECD is forecast to increase by 0.15 mb/d, while the non-OECD is forecast to grow by about 1.2 mb/d. In 2027, global oil demand is forecast to grow by about 1.3 mb/d, y-o-y, unchanged from last month’s assessment. The OECD is forecast to grow by 0.1 mb/d next year, while the non-OECD is forecast to increase by about 1.2 mb/d, y-o-y.

World Oil Supply Analysis

Non-DoC liquids production is forecast to grow by about 0.6 mb/d, y-o-y, in 2026, unchanged from last month’s assessment, mainly driven by Brazil, Canada, the US, and Argentina. In 2027, non-DoC liquids production is forecast to grow by about 0.6 mb/d, unchanged from last month’s assessment, mainly driven by Brazil, Canada, Qatar, and Argentina. Natural gas liquids (NGLs) and non-conventional liquids from countries participating in the DoC are forecast to grow by 0.1 mb/d, y-o-y, in 2026, to average about 8.8 mb/d, followed by similar growth in 2027 of about 0.1 mb/d, y-o-y, to average about 8.9 mb/d. In January, crude oil production by countries participating in the DoC decreased by 439 tb/d, m-o-m, to average about 42.45 mb/d.

Product Markets & Refining Operations

In January, refining margins declined in all reported trading hubs. Stronger feedstock prices and seasonal demand-side pressures weighed on refining margins, despite a significant rise in offline capacity due to the severe winter in the Atlantic basin and extended maintenance in Asia. In the US Gulf Coast (USGC), losses stemmed from the bottom section of the barrel as increased availability of heavy crude supplies weighed on fuel oil and, to a more limited extent, on gasoil crack spreads. In Rotterdam, all key product margins declined, with gasoline leading the decline, followed by fuel oil. In Singapore, the decline was driven by elevated gasoline and jet/kerosene supplies in the region.

Tanker Market & Freight Dynamics

Dirty tanker spot freight rates had a strong start to the year in January, supported by weather disruptions, geopolitical uncertainties, unplanned outages, and steady loading activity. VLCC spot freight rates began in 2026 with an exceptionally strong performance, which spilled over into the smaller vessel classes. Spot freight rates on the Middle East-to-East route reached the highest level for the month in at least a decade, up by 64%, y-o-y. Suezmax rates rose amid weather disruptions in the Atlantic basin and spillover support from the VLCC market. Suezmax rates on the USGC-to-Europe route were up by 12%, m-o-m, more than double year-ago levels, as European refiners sought replacements for disrupted CPC flows. Aframax spot freight rates also experienced a strong performance in January, as a cold blast tied up tonnage in the Atlantic basin. Cross-Med Aframax spot freight rates rose by 10%, m-o-m, to reach a 10-year high for the month. In the clean tanker market, spot freight rates showed a strong performance, led by East of Suez. Rates on the Middle East-to-East route were up by 17%, m-o-m, while rates around the Mediterranean gained 5%, m-o-m.

Crude & Refined Products Trade Flows

US crude imports averaged 6.3 mb/d in January, remaining in line with the latest five-year average. US crude exports rose by almost 0.2 mb/d, m-o-m, to average 4.2 mb/d, amid higher flows to Europe and Africa. Product exports from the US averaged 7.0 mb/d, down from the elevated levels seen over the previous two months. In December, crude imports into OECD Europe declined, m-o-m, driven by lower flows from Kazakhstan. Product exports picked up from the previous month on higher inflows of fuel oil and diesel. In Japan, crude imports surged, averaging just under 3 mb/d in December, the highest since March 2020. Product imports, including LPG, reached a four-month high, led by kerosene and LPG, supported by winter fuel demand. China’s crude imports surged to a record high in December, averaging 13.2 mb/d. China’s product imports declined by 3%, as naphtha inflows fell from record levels seen in the previous month. Product exports from China rose marginally, as a jump in fuel oil exports was partly offset by a drop in gasoline flows. India’s crude imports remained at elevated levels in December, averaging 5.1 mb/d, despite a slight decline, m-o-m. Product imports declined by 5%, m-o-m, to average 1.2 mb/d, as a drop in fuel oil and naphtha inflows was offset by higher LPG imports. India’s product exports were broadly unchanged at 1.4 mb/d.

Commercial Stock Movements

Preliminary December 2025 data show that OECD commercial oil inventories rose by 6.5 mb, m-o-m, to stand at 2,845 mb. At this level, OECD commercial stocks were 89.9 mb higher, y-o-y, and 44.1 mb above the latest five-year average, but 81.0 mb below the 2015–2019 average. Within the components, crude stocks fell by 2.1 mb, while product stocks increased by 8.6 mb, m-o-m. OECD crude oil commercial stocks stood at 1,363 mb. This was 75.5 mb higher, y-o-y, and 17.5 mb above the latest five-year average, but 64.2 mb lower than the 2015–2019 average. OECD total product stocks stood at 1,481 mb. This was 14.4 mb higher, y-o-y, and 26.7 mb above the latest five-year average, but 16.9 mb lower than the 2015–2019 average. In terms of days of forward cover, OECD commercial stocks rose by 0.7 days, m-o-m, in December, to stand at 62.8 days. This was 1.8 days higher than in December 2024, unchanged relative to the latest five-year average, and 0.5 days higher than the 2015–2019 average.

Supply-Demand Balance & Market Outlook

The demand for DoC crude in 2026 remains unchanged from the previous month’s assessment of 43.0 mb/d, which is about 0.6 mb/d higher than that of 2025. The demand for DoC crude in 2027 also remains unchanged from the previous month’s assessment of 43.6 mb/d, which is about 0.6 mb/d higher than the 2026 forecast.

Year World Demand (mb/d) Non-DoC Supply (mb/d) DoC Requirement (mb/d)
2026 106.5 63.5 43.0
2027 107.9 64.3 43.6

The supply-demand gap analysis indicates that for 2026, the world demand of 106.5 mb/d exceeds the non-DoC supply of 63.5 mb/d, resulting in a DoC requirement of 43.0 mb/d. This gap highlights the necessity for OPEC and its allies to maintain production levels to meet the anticipated demand. The strategic outlook for production decisions will be crucial in balancing this supply-demand equation moving forward.

Americas
25.34 mb/d
China
16.86 mb/d
India
5.66 mb/d
Asia Pacific
9.78 mb/d
Europe
13.51 mb/d
Middle East
8.96 mb/d

CFTC CoT Analysis

Sentiment: Bullish and Strengthening
Positioning: Normal Range
Report Date: 2026-03-17

Managed Money

96,371
Change: +4,249
4.6% of OI

Producer/Merchant

249,396
Change: +36,838
12.0% of OI

Swap Dealers

-512,025
Change: -23,020
-24.6% of OI

Open Interest

2,081,576
Change: 30,255

Summary Analysis:

CFTC Commitment of Traders Report (Disaggregated) as of 2026-03-17

Crude Oil Positioning (WTI-PHYSICAL - NYMEX):

Open Interest: 2,081,576 contracts (+30,255)

Managed Money Net Position: 96,371 contracts (4.6% of OI)

Weekly Change in Managed Money Net: +4,249 contracts

Producer/Merchant Net Position: 249,396 contracts

Swap Dealer Net Position: -512,025 contracts

Market Sentiment (based on Managed Money): Bullish and Strengthening

Positioning Analysis (Managed Money): Normal Range

Key Takeaways:

- Managed Money traders are large speculators, often driving price trends in Crude Oil.

- Producer/Merchant positions primarily reflect hedging activity.

- Swap Dealers act as intermediaries.

- Extreme positioning by Managed Money can indicate potential market reversals.

- CFTC data reports positions as of the report date, usually released each Friday.

About Disaggregated CoT Reports:

The Disaggregated CoT report provides a more detailed breakdown of futures market open interest.

It categorizes traders into: Producer/Merchant/Processor/User (Commercials), Swap Dealers, Managed Money (Speculators), and Other Reportables.

News Analysis

Market Sentiment Overview

BEARISH
Average Polarity: -0.7
Confidence: 1.0
Articles Analyzed: 86
Last Updated: 2026-03-24 23:54:00

Commodity Sentiment

CRUDE_OIL

-0.7

Economic Analysis

Economic Sentiment Summary

POSITIVE - Economic indicators generally supportive
Dollar Impact: Weaker USD may support commodity prices
Industrial Demand: Strong industrial demand signals
Interest Rate Impact: Rising rates may impact energy demand
Risk Sentiment: Moderate market volatility

Economic Indicators

USD_INDEX

99.28
Daily: 0.33 (0.33%)
Weekly: -0.81 (-0.81%)

US_10Y

4.39
Daily: 0.06 (1.34%)
Weekly: 0.13 (3.12%)

SP500

6556.37
Daily: -24.63 (-0.37%)
Weekly: -68.33 (-1.03%)

VIX

26.95
Daily: 0.8 (3.06%)
Weekly: 1.86 (7.41%)

GOLD

4570.3
Daily: 166.2 (3.77%)
Weekly: -319.6 (-6.54%)

COPPER

5.53
Daily: 0.09 (1.73%)
Weekly: -0.02 (-0.37%)

Fibonacci Analysis

Current Price: $89.11
Closest Support: $87.62 1.67% below current price
Closest Resistance: $95.14 6.77% above current price

Fibonacci Retracement Levels

0.0 $55.76
0.236 $70.8
0.382 $80.1
0.5 $87.62 Support
0.618 $95.14 Resistance
0.786 $105.84
1.0 $119.48

Fibonacci Extension Levels

1.272 $136.81
1.618 $158.86
2.0 $183.2
2.618 $222.58

ML Price Prediction

Current Price: $92.35
Forecast Generated: 2026-03-24 23:54:02
Next Trading Day: UP 1.09%
Date Prediction Lower Bound Upper Bound
2026-03-25 $93.36 $84.59 $102.12
2026-03-26 $92.77 $84.01 $101.53
2026-03-27 $92.22 $83.45 $100.98
2026-03-28 $91.99 $83.22 $100.75
2026-03-29 $92.35 $83.59 $101.11

ML Insights

  • Forecast generated using ARIMA(5, 1, 0).
  • The model predicts a price increase of ~1.09% for the next trading day (2026-03-25), reaching $93.36.
  • The 5-day forecast suggests a generally downward trend, moving about -1.1% between 2026-03-25 and 2026-03-29.
  • The average confidence interval width is ~18.9% of the predicted price, indicating model uncertainty.
  • SIGNAL: Weak bullish signal, high uncertainty.

AI Analysis

💹

For Energy Traders:

The current market dynamics suggest a bearish sentiment with crude oil prices facing downward pressure. The $99.94 for Brent and $88.13 for WTI indicate challenges, particularly with a $11.81 Brent-WTI spread reflecting ongoing supply/demand imbalances. Traders should be cautious of the geopolitical risks impacting price volatility. The bullish positioning of managed money, with a net position of 96,371 contracts, suggests potential for short-term price recovery, but caution is warranted due to the overall bearish market sentiment.

For Producers (Oil & Gas Companies):

With crude oil demand forecasted to rise by 1.4 mb/d in 2026, producers should consider hedging strategies to mitigate potential price declines. The balance of supply and demand remains tight, particularly with 42.45 mb/d production from OPEC+ countries. Inventory levels show a slight increase, with OECD commercial stocks up by 6.5 mb, indicating a need for careful production planning to avoid oversupply.

🏭

For Consumers (Industrial/Refineries/Transportation):

Consumers should prepare for potential input cost fluctuations as crude prices remain volatile. The $64.73 Brent price and $60.26 WTI price indicate that procurement strategies may need to adapt to fluctuating costs. Additionally, geopolitical tensions could impact supply reliability, particularly for regions reliant on imports. Monitoring inventory levels, especially with US crude imports averaging 6.3 mb/d, will be crucial for procurement decisions.

📊

For Commodity Professionals (Analysts, Consultants):

The Crude Oil market currently exhibits a bearish sentiment, driven by geopolitical factors and mixed economic indicators. The balance of supply and demand appears to be tightening, with demand growth forecasted at 1.4 mb/d for 2026. However, the increase in managed money net positions points to a potential short-term bullish trend. Analysts should closely monitor geopolitical developments and inventory levels, as they could significantly influence market conditions moving forward.

Disclaimer: This analysis is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice or specific buy/sell recommendations.