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  2. Global Commodities: Oil Outlook 2026/2027—Heavy Lifting
Global Commodities: Oil Outlook 2026/2027—Heavy Lifting

Global Commodities: Oil Outlook 2026/2027—Heavy Lifting

At Any Rate · Dec 12, 2025

Oil Outlook 2026-27: Abundant non-OPEC supply from offshore and global shale will pressure prices, forcing market rebalancing via producer cuts.

Overabundant supply, not weak demand, is the primary driver of oil price weakness.

Contrary to bearish sentiment, oil demand has consistently exceeded expectations. The market's weakness stems from a supply glut, primarily from the Americas, which has outpaced demand growth by more than twofold, leading to a structural surplus and significant inventory builds.

Global Commodities: Oil Outlook 2026/2027—Heavy Lifting thumbnail

Global Commodities: Oil Outlook 2026/2027—Heavy Lifting

At Any Rate·2 months ago

Deepwater oil projects in Brazil and Guyana offer exceptional visibility into future supply, making market surpluses highly predictable.

Unlike more volatile shale production, large-scale offshore projects from Exxon in Guyana and Petrobras in Brazil are sanctioned years in advance. This provides analysts with a highly reliable and visible pipeline of new, low-cost barrels, cementing the forecast for a sustained supply surplus.

Global Commodities: Oil Outlook 2026/2027—Heavy Lifting thumbnail

Global Commodities: Oil Outlook 2026/2027—Heavy Lifting

At Any Rate·2 months ago

Argentina's Vaca Muerta shale play is emerging as a key driver of 'Global Shale' supply.

Analysts are now looking beyond U.S. shale to a concept of 'Global Shale,' with Argentina's Vaca Muerta as a dynamic new frontier. Its rock quality is considered better than the Permian basin, allowing for lower break-even costs and creating a scalable, low-cost source of future supply.

Global Commodities: Oil Outlook 2026/2027—Heavy Lifting thumbnail

Global Commodities: Oil Outlook 2026/2027—Heavy Lifting

At Any Rate·2 months ago

A massive oil surplus will be balanced by demand stimulation and involuntary supply cuts, not just OPEC action.

A potential price collapse will be averted by the market's own circular logic. Sub-$60 prices will stimulate an extra 500,000 barrels per day of demand from price-sensitive regions while simultaneously forcing high-cost non-OPEC producers to shut down production, creating a natural market equilibrium.

Global Commodities: Oil Outlook 2026/2027—Heavy Lifting thumbnail

Global Commodities: Oil Outlook 2026/2027—Heavy Lifting

At Any Rate·2 months ago

Oil's price floor is set by specific breakeven points that trigger involuntary production cuts in the US and Russia.

The market has a natural floor. For U.S. shale, a WTI price of $47 represents a zero-return level where drilling and completions halt. For Russia, a Brent price below $42 means operators face negative margins, forcing well shut-ins and providing a backstop against a complete price collapse.

Global Commodities: Oil Outlook 2026/2027—Heavy Lifting thumbnail

Global Commodities: Oil Outlook 2026/2027—Heavy Lifting

At Any Rate·2 months ago