
Brent crude crossed $95 per barrel for the first time since late 2023 — and traders aren’t ruling out triple digits. The move is being driven by a perfect storm of OPEC+ supply discipline, Middle East geopolitical risk, and demand resilience that has consistently surprised forecasters to the upside.
For consumers, airlines, shipping companies, and central banks still fighting inflation, the timing couldn’t be worse.
OPEC+ Tightens the Tap
The OPEC+ alliance, led by Saudi Arabia and Russia, extended its voluntary production cuts of 2.2 million barrels per day through mid-2026 at its last ministerial meeting — defying expectations from analysts who had predicted a gradual unwind.
Saudi Arabia’s strategy is transparent: the Kingdom wants oil above $90 to fund Vision 2030 development projects, and it has both the financial cushion and the political will to keep supply constrained until that price is sustained. Riyadh’s breakeven oil price is approximately $80 per barrel — giving it comfortable room to hold the line.
“The market is underpricing geopolitical risk. A broader regional conflict in the Middle East could push prices to $120 very quickly — and the supply buffer that would normally absorb that shock simply doesn’t exist right now.”— Dr. Sarah Conner, Head of Commodity Research, Goldman Sachs Energy Division
Middle East Risk Premium
Beyond OPEC+ deliberations, a substantial risk premium has returned to oil markets for the first time in years. Ongoing instability across the Middle East — from the Red Sea shipping disruptions to intermittent Iran-Israel tensions — has reminded traders of a risk they had grown complacent about: physical supply interruptions.
Houthi attacks on commercial shipping in the Red Sea have forced vessels to reroute around the Cape of Good Hope, adding 10–14 days to transit times and pushing shipping costs up by over 150% from their 2023 lows. While this primarily affects container ships rather than oil tankers, it has raised insurance costs across the board and created a general climate of supply-chain anxiety.
The Supply Side Story
US shale producers are still pumping at near-record levels — 13.1 million barrels per day according to the latest Energy Information Administration data — but growth has plateaued. The most productive shale basins, particularly the Permian in West Texas, are maturing, and productivity gains from new wells are declining.
Major oil companies have also surprised investors by exercising what the industry calls “capital discipline” — returning cash to shareholders through buybacks and dividends rather than racing to drill more. After years of boom-bust cycles driven by overinvestment, the sector’s instinct is now to keep supply tighter and prices higher.
Non-OPEC producers like Brazil and Guyana are increasing output — but not at a pace that can meaningfully offset OPEC+ cuts in the near term. International Energy Agency data shows the global market in a 1.5 million barrel per day deficit in Q1 2026.
What $100 Oil Would Mean
The line that everyone in the energy market is watching is $100 per barrel. Psychologically significant and practically meaningful, triple-digit oil would:
- Add approximately 0.5 percentage points to US headline inflation (Goldman Sachs estimate)
- Push global airline fuel costs up by $15–20 billion annually above 2025 levels
- Trigger a policy dilemma for central banks: inflation goes up, but energy-driven slowdowns would argue for rate cuts
- Accelerate electric vehicle adoption in consumer markets where fuel costs are visible at the pump

Traders Are Watching
In oil futures markets, the positioning tells a clear story. Hedge funds and managed money accounts have built their largest net-long position in Brent crude since early 2022 — reflecting genuine conviction that the upward trend has further to run.
Options markets show significant open interest at the $100 and $110 strike prices, suggesting traders are not just expecting further gains but actively hedging for them.
“Every oil rally eventually meets demand destruction. The question is whether we get there at $100 or $120. This time, with EV adoption accelerating and energy efficiency improving, I think the ceiling is lower than prior cycles.”— Helena Forsyth, Senior Energy Analyst, Wood Mackenzie
For now, the direction of travel is clear. Barring a sudden geopolitical de-escalation or a surprise OPEC+ reversal, oil markets appear set to test — and potentially breach — the $100 level before mid-2026.
For live oil market data, see US EIA Petroleum Data and the IEA Oil Market Report.













