Key Takeaways:
- Brent crude surged 3% to $74.15/barrel on July 7
- Trump administration cut Brent price forecasts by more than $10
- US oil production estimates were raised for this year and next
Key Takeaways:

Brent crude jumped 3 percent to $74.15 a barrel on July 7, as traders dismissed the Trump administration's revised price forecasts that slashed Brent estimates by more than $10 for this year and next while raising US production projections.
"The market is pricing in a supply risk premium that the administration's model does not capture," said Amrita Sen, founder and director of research at Energy Aspects. "The disconnect between government forecasts and actual tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz is significant."
The US Energy Information Administration lowered its 2026 Brent price forecast to a range implying an average near $65-$68 a barrel, down from previous estimates above $78, while raising domestic output projections to a record 13.7 million barrels per day. The revisions came as the White House pushed for lower energy costs ahead of the midterm elections. Yet physical crude markets tell a different story: Saudi Arabia last week offered its deepest discount on Arab Light crude in at least 26 years, a sign that Persian Gulf producers are competing aggressively for buyers as tanker traffic resumes — but at volumes still well below pre-conflict norms.
The rally underscores a market caught between conflicting signals. On the supply side, the US-Iran memorandum eased the immediate threat of a prolonged Strait of Hormuz closure, and Iranian crude exports have resumed after sanctions were lifted. But the head of Japan's NYK Line, which operates more than 900 vessels, told the Financial Times that mine contamination means shipping through the Strait will operate at less than half of prewar levels for months even if the peace deal holds. The EIA itself projects that OECD commercial inventories will fall to an all-time low of 50 days of demand by December, from 78 days before the conflict began.
The stakes are high for consumers and producers alike. While Brent crude has returned to pre-invasion levels, refined product markets remain severely strained — gasoline prices are up 19 percent and diesel prices 30 percent above their pre-conflict levels, according to Reuters data. That means lower crude prices are not translating into relief at the pump, as refining margins trade near record highs. For US shale producers, the administration's higher output forecast implies continued pressure to maintain drilling activity even as prices soften. The next major test comes with the EIA's weekly inventory report on July 9, which will show whether US stockpiles are rebuilding fast enough to offset the structural supply gap from the Middle East.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.