- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Score Board
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- SEC Score Board
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Coaching Changes
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
Oil Prices Expected to Stay Under $70 for 2025
Posted on 7/7/25 at 7:57 am
Posted on 7/7/25 at 7:57 am
quote:
Despite heightened tensions in the Middle East, oil prices are likely to remain capped below $70 per barrel for the rest of the year amid ample supply and uncertainties about demand.
Unless actual supply disruptions occur in and around the hotspots in the Middle East, the price of oil will be a function of supply and demand, analysts and investment banks say.
Growing supply from the OPEC+ group, although not as high as the monthly headline figure of 411,000 barrels per day (bpd) suggests, is set to create an oversupply on the market going into autumn, even if summer demand holds strong. On the demand side, peak summer travel season may justify higher supply, but lingering trade and economic uncertainties may cap upside to prices.
As a result, most analysts expect oil prices to hover around the current levels in the mid-$60s per barrel and average below $70 a barrel for 2025.
quote:
“In order for oil prices to return to what we think is the $70s, kind of normal price, you need the market to really rebalance,” Thummel said.
“What that means is either oil production in other locations is going to fall, and, or effectively, demand for oil is probably going to rise more than what people expect in the second half of the year.”
According to Ole Hansen, Head of Commodity Strategy at Saxo Bank, crude oil may face headwinds in the second half of the year amid rising output and economic growth concerns.
“OPEC8+ continues to ramp up production in an effort to punish overproducing quota cheaters, and to reclaim market share from higher-cost producers which may eventually have to dial down production amid lower price expectations,” Hansen said in a weekly commodities commentary.
quote:
The oil market is full of uncertainties, but current supply and demand balances point to an oversupply and subdued oil prices in the coming months, barring a supply disruption in the Middle East.
LINK
Sounds like we may have to resort to purchasing used truck nuts the rest of the year. Is there a Facebook Marketplace for such a commodity?
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:01 am to ragincajun03
I thought $70 was kind of a sweet spot. No? Of course they'd prefer $170 but I thought somewhere around $70 made it possible to produce, do maintenance and generally make the oil patch more or less run itself as much as it ever does. Drop much below that and shutting down becomes a reality and going up much more than that means a lot of pressure to produce more and more.
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:02 am to ragincajun03
Its amazing to me that people will bitch about $3+/gal gas but are ok with paying $5.50/lb ground beef, or $5/lb chicken?
For the amount of infrastructure, construction, engineering, manufacturing, and distribution costs to get oil out the ground and to your car $3 seems cheap.
Cows standing in a field eating hay and then going to the slaughter house ought to be cheaper than $5+/lb.
For the amount of infrastructure, construction, engineering, manufacturing, and distribution costs to get oil out the ground and to your car $3 seems cheap.
Cows standing in a field eating hay and then going to the slaughter house ought to be cheaper than $5+/lb.
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:02 am to N2cars
quote:
$75 is a perfect #, IMO
Quite a few Permian operators like to project their DPIs based on $70/bbl WTI, so $75 would definitely be a good number to have in 2025, while not forcing things to get stupid expensive like a $100/bbl world would.
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:03 am to ragincajun03
Truck nuts off!
Time to refill the SPR.
Time to refill the SPR.
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:05 am to AwgustaDawg
quote:
Of course they'd prefer $170
I don't think the industry is staffed, nor could staff adequately enough, for a $170/bbl market in the next several years. It would be chaos.
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:08 am to AwgustaDawg
quote:
I thought $70 was kind of a sweet spot. No?
It is the sweet spot for companies like diamondback energy if they want to stay profitable
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:08 am to ragincajun03
Paid $2.54/gallon on Saturday
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:14 am to danilo
quote:
Paid $2.54/gallon on Saturday
Stop jumping ahead, baw.
The weekly gasoline price report will be coming later this morning.
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:25 am to ragincajun03
Seems like something is going to break. Oil below $75 with these high input costs on steel, completion costs, etc. while oil prices in inflation adjusted terms are the same level as 20 plus years ago won't work. Trump has a central thesis of low oil prices, and whether the EIA data being manipulated or strong arming the middle eastern nations that seems to be his main goal. Look at the actions Chris Wright has taken since he has gotten to Washington.
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:26 am to ragincajun03
As much as republicans love Trump, he wants oil price as low as possible, and is pressuring OPEC and OPEC+ countries to produce more. You’re seeing that in recent headlines as they look to increase production and it will reflect in the price.
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:31 am to ragincajun03
Well, you want oil to live above 60 but below 90. And don’t get me wrong, you’re still printing money at 90, but gas gets up over $3.50 a gallon, it starts to pinch. It hits a hundred, every product in America has to readjust its price. $78 a barrel, that’s about perfect. You know, brings enough profit to keep exploring, but it don’t sting as much at the pump.
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:34 am to ragincajun03
The lower the better. Everyone still making bank.
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:41 am to kywildcatfanone
quote:
The lower the better. Everyone still making bank.
Don't know about that. Get down into the 40s and watch the rigs start to sit idle in the yards.
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:42 am to kywildcatfanone
MS increased the gas tax last week and I still paid only $2.39/gallon yesterday.
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:43 am to ragincajun03
Yep. I need 4 more years of steady
Posted on 7/7/25 at 8:48 am to ragincajun03
quote:
Quite a few Permian operators like to project their DPIs based on $70/bbl WTI, so $75 would definitely be a good number to have in 2025, while not forcing things to get stupid expensive like a $100/bbl world would.
I spent a lot of time in the Delaware Basin around that 2014 boom, first time I had ever seen that sort of activity, energy, money falling from the sky, etc.
Saw everything come back to reality over the next few years then moved away.
I realize there has been a lot of change in the industry with acquisitions and technology in the last decade, is it still considered a boom right now in terms of activity and mentality despite being $70s instead of $100+ or are things closer to the 2015-2016 vibes?
Everyone should experience a boom at least once just for the perspective it provides
Posted on 7/7/25 at 9:00 am to JusTrollin
quote:
amazing to me that people will bitch about $3+/gal gas but are ok with paying $5.50/lb ground beef, or $5/lb chicken?
Because they eat 4-6 lb of beef and chicken a week vs using 25-40 gallons of gas per week?
Popular
Back to top
10







