Oil Prices Hold Steady Amid Geopolitical Tensions: Brent at $62.66, WTI at $58.68 on Dec 24 – Potential Upside Ahead? 24-12-2025
Oil prices
Oil prices remain stable today, December 24, 2025, with Brent crude at $62.66 per barrel and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) at $58.68 per barrel, reflecting a delicate balance between geopolitical risks and supply pressures. Recent news highlights US actions against Venezuelan tankers and Ukraine’s strikes on Russian energy assets as key supports, countering broader oversupply concerns. This oil price snapshot draws from real-time market data and today’s headlines for investors and analysts.
Current Oil Prices
Brent crude futures rose slightly to around $62.47-$62.66 per barrel on December 24, marking a 0.14%-0.19% daily gain after five consecutive sessions of advances. WTI crude hovered near $57.98-$58.68, up modestly amid heightened volatility from global events. These levels position both benchmarks for potential short-term stabilization, though year-to-date declines exceed 15%.
| Benchmark | Price (USD/Bbl) | Daily Change | Monthly Change | Yearly Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brent | 62.66 | +0.19% | +1.08% | -15.14% |
| WTI | 58.68 | +0.23% | -1.46% | -17.29% |
Key Market Drivers
Geopolitical tensions dominate today’s oil price dynamics. US forces under President Donald Trump pursued another Venezuelan tanker, seizing vessels to disrupt Maduro’s revenue streams, though exports represent under 1% of global supply. Ukraine’s drone strikes damaged Russian Black Sea infrastructure, including tankers and piers, raising supply disruption fears along key export routes.
OPEC+ production hikes add downward pressure, with gradual increases starting December despite compensation cuts from overproducers like Iraq and Kazakhstan. US inventories showed mixed signals, with API reporting a 2.4 million barrel build last week, signaling ample stocks. Oil prices
Recent Trends Table
Oil prices have fluctuated amid these forces. Here’s a snapshot of December movements:
| Date | Brent (USD/Bbl) | WTI (USD/Bbl) | Key Event |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dec 23, 2025 | 62.38 | 57.98 | Inventory build |
| Dec 16, 2025 | ~60.00 | ~55.25 | Oversupply fears |
| Dec 5, 2025 | 63.93 | ~61.00 | Monthly high |
| Dec 1, 2025 | 63.18 | N/A | Start of month |
Prices dipped to multi-month lows mid-December on glut fears but rebounded on risks.
Geopolitical Impacts
Venezuela tensions provide a risk premium, with Trump ordering blockades on sanctioned tankers, boarded recently by the US Coast Guard. This echoes broader sanctions aiming to curb 1% of global supply flows to China.
In Europe, Ukraine targeted Russia’s “shadow fleet,” igniting fires near export hubs and complicating Black Sea routes. Peace talks edge forward per Trump statements, potentially easing pressures if resolved, but strikes sustain volatility. Oil prices
Supply and Demand Outlook
OPEC forecasts US output growth slowing to 300,000 bpd in 2025 due to prices near shale breakevens, alongside 5% non-OPEC+ investment cuts. Demand worries persist from weak manufacturing in China and India, plus trade uncertainties.
Analysts like Goldman Sachs cut 2025 Brent targets to $60 amid hikes, but short-term bias tilts bearish with volatility opportunities. Trading Economics projects WTI at $56.70 end-quarter, rising to $62.51 in 12 months.
Implications for Markets
Lower oil prices ease inflation but challenge producers, impacting petrochemicals and plastics costs—key for global supply chains. Traders eye API/EIA data and holiday-thinned volumes for swings. For 2026, oversupply risks loom unless demand rebounds or geopolitics tightens markets.
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