Oil Prices Plunge 2.5% as OPEC, IEA Outlooks Point to Softer Market

Oil prices tumbled on Tuesday, with Brent down 2.46% at $63.56 a barrel at 9:54 a.m. ET, and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) slid 2.64% to $59.43, as traders reacted to fresh signals of easing supply pressure and waning demand momentum through early 2026.

The drop came after OPEC revised its projections to show a “balanced” market next year, moving further from the deficit forecast it held earlier this fall. The update suggests that additional OPEC+ production and resilient non-OPEC output could offset modest demand growth, erasing near-term fears of tightness.

At the same time, the International Energy Agency (IEA) abandoned its earlier “peak oil” narrative, conceding that consumption will continue to rise through the decade on strong petrochemical, transport, and aviation demand. That adjustment undermined prior expectations of structural decline and left traders questioning the timing of a global supply-demand rebalancing.

Market sentiment also took a hit amid political uncertainty in Washington, where the U.S. Senate on Nov. 10 backed a stop-gap funding bill by a 60-40 vote to fund the government through Jan. 30, 2026, but the measure still must pass the U.S. House of Representatives before reaching President Donald Trump for signature. The uncertainty of the House vote, along with the unresolved push to extend key health-subsidy programs, could delay federal spending flows and dampen near-term energy consumption. Any delay in final approval could lead to a slowdown in economic activity and weaker demand for crude.

The combination of steady OPEC+ supply, softer macroeconomic indicators, and shifting institutional forecasts has triggered broad liquidation across crude contracts. Traders cited by Reuters said technical pressure intensified once Brent slipped below $64, prompting algorithmic selling that amplified losses.

Brent and WTI are now at their lowest levels since early September, erasing the autumn rally that followed refinery outages in the U.S. Gulf. With inventories stable and demand revisions trending down, market participants are bracing for further volatility ahead of OPEC’s December policy review.

By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com

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