What is the "Right Price" for WTI Oil?
Posted: Thu May 15, 2025 8:16 am
Let this sink in:
1. In June 2008 oil peaked at a nominal price of $126.33 (inflation-adjusted price of $183.40)
2. Oil prices fell to the ridiculously low COVID-induced glut price of $11.18 in April 2020 (inflation-adjusted $13.86).
3. The average inflation-adjusted price for crude oil since 1946 is $57.18, which is still about one-third of the 2008 price.
4. The average inflation-adjusted price since 1980 is higher at $70.17
5. The average inflation-adjusted price since 2000 is even higher at $78.37.
For the last nine quarters (Q1 2023 to Q1 2025) WTI averaged $76.07 > Quarterly high of $82.32 in Q3 2023 and quarterly low of $70.28 in Q4 2024.
In Q1 2025 WTI averaged $71.42. < So, this is the "Before the Tariff War Oil Price".
If WTI stays in the low $60s, U.S. oil production will go on decline soon and total non-OPEC+ production is likely to go on decline in 2026. Once the decline in non-OPEC oil production is confirmed it will be a major Paradigm Shift and it will be difficult to stop the production decline.
MY TAKE: If the Tariff War ends in June and the Republicans pass the income tax bill, I believe the risk of U.S. recession is zero and the risk of a global recession is very low. Trump will go to maximum pressure on Iran soon. Unless Saudi Arabia wants to punish the cheaters within OPEC+ at a significant cost for themselves, they will stop raising the oil supply in Q3. Plus, June - September is the highest demand period of the year for gasoline and diesel.
Bottomline: WTI will ramp back up to the "Before the Tariff War Oil Price" by year end and average $75/bbl in 2026
Read this to get a better understanding of why WTI in the $60s is not based on supply/demand fundamental. It is just based on FEAR of recession.
https://inflationdata.com/articles/inflation-adjusted-prices/historical-oil-prices-chart/
1. In June 2008 oil peaked at a nominal price of $126.33 (inflation-adjusted price of $183.40)
2. Oil prices fell to the ridiculously low COVID-induced glut price of $11.18 in April 2020 (inflation-adjusted $13.86).
3. The average inflation-adjusted price for crude oil since 1946 is $57.18, which is still about one-third of the 2008 price.
4. The average inflation-adjusted price since 1980 is higher at $70.17
5. The average inflation-adjusted price since 2000 is even higher at $78.37.
For the last nine quarters (Q1 2023 to Q1 2025) WTI averaged $76.07 > Quarterly high of $82.32 in Q3 2023 and quarterly low of $70.28 in Q4 2024.
In Q1 2025 WTI averaged $71.42. < So, this is the "Before the Tariff War Oil Price".
If WTI stays in the low $60s, U.S. oil production will go on decline soon and total non-OPEC+ production is likely to go on decline in 2026. Once the decline in non-OPEC oil production is confirmed it will be a major Paradigm Shift and it will be difficult to stop the production decline.
MY TAKE: If the Tariff War ends in June and the Republicans pass the income tax bill, I believe the risk of U.S. recession is zero and the risk of a global recession is very low. Trump will go to maximum pressure on Iran soon. Unless Saudi Arabia wants to punish the cheaters within OPEC+ at a significant cost for themselves, they will stop raising the oil supply in Q3. Plus, June - September is the highest demand period of the year for gasoline and diesel.
Bottomline: WTI will ramp back up to the "Before the Tariff War Oil Price" by year end and average $75/bbl in 2026
Read this to get a better understanding of why WTI in the $60s is not based on supply/demand fundamental. It is just based on FEAR of recession.
https://inflationdata.com/articles/inflation-adjusted-prices/historical-oil-prices-chart/