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The global oil market in late 2025 is grappling with a confluence of bearish pressures, driven by surging U.S. crude production, a widening global supply glut, and weak demand growth. These dynamics are reshaping investment strategies, particularly as refined product markets exhibit relative resilience amid the broader downturn.

The International Energy Agency (IEA)
of 4.0 million barrels per day in 2026, driven by non-OPEC+ production growth and sluggish demand. Non-OPEC+ countries, including the U.S., Brazil, and Canada, are operating near record output levels, while to electric vehicles have permanently displaced gasoline consumption by over 500,000 barrels per day. The IEA's November 2025 report further notes that , with non-OPEC+ and OPEC+ producers each contributing roughly half of this increase.OPEC+ has attempted to stabilize the market by pausing production increases in Q1 2026, but
and rising output from members like the UAE, Iraq, and Kazakhstan threaten to widen the supply-demand gap. The EIA anticipates that global oil inventories will continue to rise through 2026, with in Q4 2025. These trends are expected to drive Brent crude prices lower, with .While crude prices face downward pressure, refined product markets have shown resilience.
by supply disruptions, including on Russian refineries and U.S. sanctions on major Russian oil companies. These factors have temporarily offset oversupply concerns, with in late 2025. However, analysts caution that this strength is unlikely to persist, as global refining margins remain vulnerable to inventory builds and weak demand.Titulares diarios de acciones y criptomonedas, gratis en tu bandeja de entrada
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