Thursday, August 21, 2025
A Brent crude price floor at $65 for now?
Wednesday, August 06, 2025
Seesawing crude price, fresh lows & more
Tuesday, September 10, 2024
$80 is looking like Brent's price ceiling not the floor
The current market sentiment has sent Wall Street banks scrambling to lower their oil price forecasts and market observers to tone down their demand growth forecasts for both this year and the next. This blogger has long been suggesting that 2024 will end in an oversupply of light sweet crude. But as it appears, the whole market might well be in surplus regardless.
Away from pricing, here's yours truly latest missive for Energy Connects on M&A activity in the sector which appears to be pretty buoyant. Looks like the low price climate has seemingly narrowed the buyer-seller disconnect.
More musings to follow soon. Keep reading, keep it here, keep it 'crude'!
Saturday, November 11, 2023
Can oil really hit $150? (And more!)
With hostilities in the Middle East failing to lift crude prices despite all the talk of risk premiums and potential supply disruptions, being bullish about oil early in 2024 is proving hard. That's because concerns over crude demand are outweighing concerns over supply.
We're talking muted demand from the economic powerhouses of Germany and China, lower consumer confidence levels in key OECD markets and elevated interest rate levels kept there by major global central banks, especially the US Federal Reserve.
It therefore came as a surprise to The Oilholic when the World Bank opined that crude prices could hit $150 if hostilities in the Middle East escalate! Here are this blogger's thoughts on that via Forbes. Simply put - don't hold your breath!
And let's not forget, Brent hasn't even capped a more realistic $100 per barrel level the bulls crave. The benchmark's January 2024 contract is barely higher than current levels, and contracts further out into the summer of next year are even lower. That implies Brent remains in backwardation mode.
Away from the crude price, the latest quarterly earnings posted by energy majors provided plenty of talking points. More so, after the return of megadeals as ExxonMobil swooped for Pioneer Natural Resources and Chevron swooped for Hess Corp.
Other deals may follow as the energy majors fish for viable plays. It's led many, including this blogger, to wonder if a supermajor itself could be vulnerable? The prime candidate for finding itself in this position is BP; a chronically undervalued supermajor in the Oilholic's opinion. More on the subject here via Forbes.
Is it possible? Yes, especially in a industry built on big ticket deals. Will it happen? Probably no, not least down to BP's $100 billion plus valuation (however discounted that may appear to some). But as yours truly noted on Forbes - that the company has had to bat away questions about being a takeover target is pretty extraordinary and indicative of how far it has fallen. Well that's all for now folks. Keep reading, keep it here, keep it 'crude'!
Wednesday, July 05, 2023
All about crude "market stability"
Wednesday, August 12, 2020
Joining Citi Private Bank
Some personal news: After 16 years of scrutinizing #oil, #energy markets, felt I needed a change. Delighted to accept such an opportunity @Citi Private Bank at VP-level. I remain a 'crude' man but broadening analytical scope to EMs, circular economy, impact investing & more #OOTT
— Gaurav Sharma (@The_Oilholic) August 11, 2020
It has been a fantastic 'crude' journey for the Oilholic in the energy market and this blog has been with yours truly every step of the way for over a decade. Thank you all for your support. While long may that continue, commentary here would be a little tempered and slightly irregular as this blogger has taken up a Vice President / Lead Analyst's position at Citi Private Bank.
Things won't be coming to a close here, but whatever appears on this blog would be in a private capacity only. That also applies to any commentary published here in the past prior to Aug 1, 2020. That's all for the moment folks! Keep reading, keep it 'crude'!
© Gaurav Sharma 2020.
Tuesday, December 24, 2019
Ten years of 'crude' blogging & a big thank you!
Boy does time fly! When yours took this blog live and put his first post up on December 24, 2009, Barack Obama had been in the White House for less than a year; Gordon Brown was still in Downing Street; the global economy was limping back from the financial crisis; the US shale revolution's impact hadn't been felt; OPEC had held its latest minister's meeting in Luanda, Angola instead of its secretariat in Vienna, Austria; and Brent and WTI futures closed at $76.31 and $78.05 per barrel respectively, with a premium in the latter's favour! That's a 10-year decline of $9.84 (-12.9%) for Brent and $17.5 (-22.42%) for WTI versus this European morning's prices in Asia.
As the years go by, here's hoping this blog is (and will be) as much fun for those reading it as it is for the one writing it. So keep reading, keep it 'crude' and once again thank you for all your support.
Friday, December 06, 2019
OPEC+ announces deeper cuts of 500kbpd
- "Signal we want market to take is that we are collectively showing readiness to rebalance the market, prevent heavy inventory buildup in Q1 2020," - Abdulaziz bin Salman.
- "Russia wants to avoid any oil market turbulence in 2020. We are not concerned with US shale, seeing signs of shale slowdown," - Russian Oil Minister Alexander Novak.
Saturday, July 06, 2019
A rollover and a poem for OPEC
Friday, June 14, 2019
A calmer view on oil market volatility

Sunday, May 13, 2018
Crude talk in H-Town
Tuesday, May 08, 2018
In Houston Town To Trump's Iranian Frowns
Monday, January 29, 2018
On Brent at $70/bbl & crude blockchain moves
However, that doesn’t necessarily mean yours truly has turned bullish. The Oilholic continues to follow his preferred mantra of being net-short over the long term, and long over the short term. The reasons are simple enough – more US oil, even if purely for domestic consumption – is inevitable.
Inventories have rebalanced, and demand is picking up, but relative to that, there is still plenty of oil in the market. Yet, there is a school of thought out there that the International Energy Agency (IEA) has exaggerated the significance of shale. The Saudi Oil Minister Khalid Al-Falih, among other influential voices at OPEC, has endorsed such a thinking.
BP, Statoil and other traders such as Koch Supply & Trading and Gunvor have all recently gone down the blockchain path.
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
Feeling the crude temperature ahead of OPEC 173
Going by the events of the last 24 hours, looks like the Russians, in town leading the 10 non-OPEC producers, seem to be giving the most briefings, and mostly to Russian journalists and analysts.
Expect more of the same, though OPEC's problem is the lack of an exit strategy, which is why some in its ranks want to kick the can down the road even if the Russians aren't keen. Meanwhile, since its been over 10 years of covering OPEC by the Oilholic, here's a look back at the last ten years for IBTimes UK. A whole lot memories, episodes and experiences to narrate.
Monday, October 30, 2017
Oil bulls being cautious in Zurich
Sunday, October 22, 2017
Rig count falls and crude oil bulls rise!
Sunday, July 23, 2017
Of long calls and more Colombian barrels
In fact, US shale producers are in their element, and producing comfortably at the current oil price range.
Sunday, July 09, 2017
Time for Istanbul and WPC 22
© Gaurav Sharma 2017. Photo: Istanbul Congress Center, venue of the 22nd World Petroleum Congress © Gaurav Sharma 2017.
Thursday, May 25, 2017
No surprises! OPEC & non-OPEC cuts rolled over for 9 months

Except of course Equatorial Guinea became the 14th member of OPEC out of the blue, and with little prior intimation to half of the world's press.
Two summits, one 'crude' venue
That's all from Vienna, for the moment folks! More shortly! Keep reading, keep it 'crude'!