Crude inventories in the United States showed an unexpected gain last week, which, together with other factors, contributed to pushing down oil prices.
“At 439.8 million barrels, U.S. crude oil inventories are about 4 percent below the five-year average for this time of year,” the EIA said.
Inventory buildup can happen due to a decline in demand, a jump in production, or other factors. Rising inventory signals oversupply in the market or that people are using less fuel than usual, which puts downward pressure on prices.
The group had previously reduced crude oil output by 2.2 million barrels per day. Last December, OPEC+ members agreed to bring back this supply gradually from this year.
Originally, a single supply increment was scheduled for May. But on Thursday, OPEC+ announced that two more planned future monthly increments would be enacted in May.
As a result, the group expects 411,000 barrels per day of supply addition from next month. With a massive supply incoming, oil prices dropped.
Another key factor for falling oil prices is the latest tariff announcements by the Trump administration, which could turn out to be negative for oil demand.
The Trump administration’s new tariff regime is expected to boost the U.S. manufacturing sector and create more jobs within the country.
“In a pessimistic scenario, where trade wars escalate and are compounded by other adverse factors such as geopolitical conflicts and inflation, S&P Global Market Intelligence estimated that global GDP growth would be downgraded by roughly 1 percent, leading to a reduction in oil/liquids demand growth by half a million b/d in 2025,” they added.
Oil Outlook
In its March 11 short-term energy outlook, the EIA said it expects global oil markets to remain “relatively tight” through the middle of the year, followed by inventory buildup in the later part of 2025.Global inventories are predicted to decline in the second quarter, partly due to falling output in Venezuela and Iran, as a result of which Brent crude oil spot price is expected to rise to $75 per barrel by the third quarter, according to the agency.
“However, we expect oil inventories will build and place downward pressure on crude oil prices in late-2025 and through 2026 when we expect OPEC+ unwinds production cuts and non-OPEC oil production grows,” it said.
“As a result, we forecast the Brent crude oil price will fall to an average of $68/b in 2026.”
“Nevertheless, global oil demand growth is still expected to average just over 1 mb/d this year, up from 830 kb/d in 2024, boosted in part by lower oil prices. Asian countries will account for almost 60 percent of gains, led by China,” the report reads.