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July 8, 2025
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Here’s a comprehensive look at the latest trends and headlines in the oil & gas futures market, with data and key numbers you need to know.

1. Oil Prices Pressured by OPEC+ Supply Surge & U.S. Tariff Risk

  • On July 7, Brent crude futures surged nearly 2% to $69.58, while WTI rose 1.4% to $67.93. This was driven by demand optimism despite an unexpected OPEC+ output hike for August.
  • By July 8, prices eased slightly: Brent dipped to $69.46, WTI to $67.68, as markets digested U.S. tariff developments and the production boost.
  • Commentary from Stratas Advisors noted Brent ending at $68.30, with expectations it could test $66 amid U.S. tariff threats and OPEC+ moves (hartenergy.com).

What’s next?

  • OPEC+ has confirmed an additional 548,000 bpd increase in August, with Goldman projecting a further 550,000 bpd hike in September, likely culminating in a total supply lift of 2.2 million bpd from voluntary cuts.
  • Wall Street banks slightly revised forecasts upward—Goldman Sachs now anticipates Brent averaging $66.32 in 2025 (WTI: $63.03), though a bearish outlook persists due to lingering oversupply. Q4 forecasts: Brent $63.87, WTI $60.69 (wsj.com).
  • Morgan Stanley expects a further decline to ~$60/bbl by early 2026 amid ample supply and easing geopolitical risks (reuters.com).

2. Middle East Geopolitics Remain a Wildcard

  • June’s Israeli strikes on Iran briefly sent Brent crude up 11%, peaking oil risk perceptions. However, markets have largely shrugged off the threats, keeping prices below $70.
  • Warnings of a Strait of Hormuz blockade heightened the risk; analysts stated closure could spike oil prices beyond $100–150, given the Strait handles some 18–19 million bpd (~20% global supply).

3. Natural Gas: Cooling Prices, Heatwave Watch

  • U.S. natural gas futures for August (NGQ25) held firm at around $3.45/mmBtu, as markets balanced ample storage (+6.2% vs 5-year average) with warming summer forecasts (barchart.com).
  • However, prices dipped ~3.6% to $3.847/mmBtu as profit-taking surfaced ahead of hotter mid-July forecasts (wsj.com).

4. Major Producers Flag Earnings Pressure

  • Exxon Mobil forewarned of a $800M–$1.2B hit to Q2 upstream profits from lower crude, plus $300M–$700M from weak natural gas prices. Q1 upstream profit was $6.8B; the full earnings release is due August 1 2025.
  • Shell projected weaker integrated gas and LNG trading results in Q2, expecting $1.4–$1.8B earnings and dropping production slightly. Its stock fell ~3% after the warning.
  • Across the sector, Q2 earnings are forecast to fall ~17% amid ~10% oil price decline and gas price softness.

5. Futures and Market Structure: Volume & positioning

  • NYMEX WTI futures closed July 8 at $67.66/bbl, down ~0.4% from the previous day, but are up ~3.6% over the past month (tradingeconomics.com).
  • Trading volume on NYMEX rose: ~720,000 contracts traded July 7 (compared to ~630,000 previous session). Open interest dropped by ~38,600 contracts to ~2.03 million.
  • Barchart data on July 7 showed August WTI futures (CLQ25) closed at $67.77, +1.39%, supported by Saudi Aramco’s Asia-bound pricing signal and Middle East tension.

6. Fuel Prices & Consumer Impact

  • End‑user prices reflect this volatility:
    • U.S. average regular gas: ~$3.16/gal, down 6¢ week-on-week, 35¢ YOY
    • Diesel: ~$3.69/gal
    • Consumers may yet see further declines as OPEC+ maintains supply growth (businessinsider.com).

Outlook & Takeaway

Factor Expected Influence
OPEC+ Supply Continued increases expected; likely to pressure prices
Demand Strength Holding up markets, but limited upside amid supply glut
Geopolitical Risk Could spike prices if tensions escalate again
Micro Drag U.S. tariffs and global economic data remain key variables

Strategy insights:

  • Short-term: Expect broad trading range between $65–$70/bbl for WTI, with spikes tied to disruptions.
  • Q4–2026: Market projections lean bearish—Brent in low $60s, WTI around $60/bbl.
  • Natural Gas: Watch heat forecasts—mid-July could push prices toward $4/mmBtu, after which moderate storage and demand may stabilize prices in the $3–3.50 range.

This dynamic backdrop makes the upcoming August/September OPEC+ decisions especially pivotal—futures traders, producers, and consumers alike should monitor these cues closely.

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