Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.

As Russia vows to retaliate against oil price caps, a slate of geopolitical risks could send crude prices soaring — or bring it crashing down

In This Article:

Good morning, readers. I'm Phil Rosen, reporting from Manhattan. Let's start with two key energy moves.

First, as you may have heard, Russia cut the tap indefinitely for Nord Stream 1 pipeline gas flows. Russian President Vladimir Putin today blamed Germany and Western sanctions for the halt in operations, but said that gas flows could restart tomorrow, provided it gets the key turbines needed.

Second, at OPEC's meeting Monday, cartel members agreed to cut oil production by about 0.1% of global output.

These two levers set the backdrop for today's newsletter.

As Europe's energy crisis rages on, more EU nations might start pivoting away from burning natural gas and instead try to lean into oil, according to Bank of America.

That could lead to more demand for crude, and so higher prices.

But the firm's forecast is ultimately mixed, reflecting the uncertainty of the times: Crude prices could either surge or crash more than 20% depending on how a smattering of risks unfold.

Buckle up.


If this was forwarded to you, sign up here. Download Insider's app here.


Oil refinery
Oil refinery

1. BofA analysts highlighted several variables that could send oil up or down by $5 to $20 a barrel.

A slate of supply and demand risks could make oil prices fluctuate dramatically, the foremost being a potential global recession.

According to analysts, manufacturing data suggests that a contraction in industrial activity is likely, which points to a downturn that could cut oil demand growth expectations by over 1 million barrels a day.

That could send Brent toward $75, the bank said.

Similarly, in the event of a new Iran nuclear deal, prices could fall temporarily by as much as $15 a barrel as an extra 1 million barrels hit the market.

Meanwhile, geopolitical uncertainty in Iraq and Libya threatens to push crude prices higher, as does China's potential reopening after stringent COVID-19 lockdowns.

A US-led price cap on Russian crude could also sway prices, but Russia's energy minister said the nation will respond by shipping more crude to Asia.

"Any actions to impose a price cap will lead to deficit on (initiating countries') own markets and will increase price volatility," Nikolai Shulginov said at the Eastern Economic Forum, per Reuters.

G7 finance ministers last week endorsed a plan to cap the sanctioned barrels as a way to minimize funding to Moscow's war machine, but Europe continues to take in huge amounts of Putin's supplies.

What's your oil price forecast and why? How do you see energy markets shaking out for the rest of the year? Email prosen@insider.com or tweet @philrosenn.  


In other news:

Russia's Gazprom reported record net income for the first half of 2022 on Tuesday.
Russia's Gazprom reported record net income for the first half of 2022 on Tuesday.

Getty Images