WTI crude is expected to correct sharply lower over the coming quarter, falling from $89.33/bbl (29 Mar 2026) to $70.23/bbl by 21 Jun 2026, a decline of 21.4%. The move implies a transition from a tight, geopolitically supported market to one dominated by supply normalization, easing risk premia, and softer demand momentum.
The core driver is a shift in physical balances. Current prices embed an aggressive tightness narrative that is not consistent with emerging supply data. Non‑OPEC+ production—particularly U.S. shale, Brazil, and Guyana—continues to surprise to the upside, adding an incremental 0.8–1.0 mb/d annualized into mid‑2026. At the same time, OPEC+ spare capacity remains historically high, reducing the credibility of sustained price spikes when compliance slippage appears. The market is likely to reassess the durability of recent cuts as several producers face intensifying fiscal pressure to increase exports into a high‑price window.
Inventories are the key tell. Commercial crude stocks that drew aggressively through late 2025 have started to stabilize and are poised to flip back into builds as refinery maintenance, higher runs into summer, and rising product stocks alter crude and product flows. A switch from weekly draws of 2–3 mb to modest builds is typically consistent with a $10–15/bbl repricing lower from elevated levels; the current forecast sits toward the larger end of that historical range because of the elevated geopolitical premium embedded in the $85–95/bbl band.
Forecasts for Crude Oil Price (WTI) with 12-period horizon (weekly)
Positioning and structure reinforce the downside case. Money‑manager net length in WTI and Brent is extended versus five‑year averages, and options skew is heavily tilted toward upside protection, signaling crowded long exposure to a “higher for longer” oil narrative. The front of the curve trades in firm backwardation, reflecting scarcity pricing. As balances loosen and inventories build, the curve should flatten, removing the roll yield advantage of long futures and encouraging systematic and discretionary de‑risking. A normalization of the front‑month spread by 10–20/bbl spot correction.
Demand dynamics are no longer a strong tailwind. Global liquids demand growth is decelerating toward ~0.9–1.1 mb/d year‑on‑year into mid‑2026, down from >1.8 mb/d at the post‑COVID peak. OECD consumption is flat to declining as efficiency gains and mild weather offset industrial upticks, while key emerging markets are facing tighter financial conditions and weaker FX, damping import capacity at high dollar oil prices. A firm U.S. dollar into mid‑2026 further tightens financial conditions for major importers and historically correlates with softer crude benchmarks.
The main risks to this bearish thesis are on the geopolitical and policy side. A material, sustained supply disruption (e.g., >1 mb/d) from a key producer or transport chokepoint could overwhelm emerging surplus and keep WTI anchored above 70s. Conversely, if OPEC+ discipline erodes faster than expected or U.S. shale productivity outperforms, WTI could overshoot the target on the downside, briefly testing the mid‑$60s before supply responds.
Disclaimer: This forecast is generated using statistical models and historical data. It is intended for informational purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Always conduct your own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.
WTI crude is projected to drop 21.4% over the coming quarter, sliding from $89.33/bbl (29 Mar 2026) to $70.23/bbl by 21 Jun 2026 as the market shifts from a geopolitically tight narrative to one anchored in loosening physical balances, upside surprises in non‑OPEC+ supply, and persistent OPEC+ spare capacity that undermines the durability of recent cuts. Emerging inventory builds—transitioning from 2–3 mb weekly draws to net additions—signal a regime change in crude and product flows that historically drives a $10–15/bbl repricing lower, with this move skewed to the downside as elevated risk premia embedded above $85/bbl are stripped out.