Oil prices are falling to their lowest close since 2021 as eight countries including Saudi Arabia and Russia surprised market leaders by announcing an increase to production.
The shock decision by the OPEC+ alliance, delivered via a video conference on Thursday, came less than 24 hours after President Trump’s Liberation Day tariff announcements intensified global trade war tensions.
Brent crude oil futures fell by five per cent on Friday morning as benchmark oil prices while the US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) benchmark dipped by roughly the same level.
The mass selloff has prompted Goldman Sachs analysts to radically reduce their benchmark targets for Brent and WTI by over six per cent for 2026.
The other countries part of the OPEC+ alliance include oil producers Iraq, the UAE, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Algeria and Oman.
The announcement sees oil production increase by three times the planned amount in May as producers hope to drive down prices in response to excess production from members Iraq and Kazakhstan.
Crude oil prices had already taken a hit from Trump’s announcement but OPEC+ may have seen an opportunity after his Rose Garden speech, according to ING’s head of commodities strategy Warren Patterson.
“US President Trump is taking a more hawkish view towards Iran and Venezuela with stricter sanctions. OPEC+ might feel that this provides it with the opportunity to increase supply,” he said.
“OPEC+ might see this as an opportunity to boost supply, especially after Trump announced secondary tariffs for buyers of Venezuelan oil and threatened similar measures for buyers of Iranian and, potentially, Russian oil.”
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