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Oil Pulls Back After Surge | Is a Deeper Drop Coming?

Oil Pulls Back After Surge | Is a Deeper Drop Coming?

Oil prices remained high but volatile on April 6, 2026, with WTI crude trading near $103 per barrel, following last week’s sharp rally to multi-week highs.

The market entered the new week after one of its strongest moves in months, with crude prices still elevated as traders assess conflicting geopolitical developments.

Mixed Signals Drive Price Swings

Oil markets are currently reacting to two opposing forces: escalating tensions and growing diplomatic efforts.

  • Brent crude prices initially rebounded above $109 as concerns over supply disruptions intensified following renewed threats against Iran’s infrastructure.
  • However, oil later pulled back slightly toward $106, as markets reacted to ongoing ceasefire discussions and diplomatic negotiations.

Brent crude hovered around 106$–107$, reflecting uncertainty rather than a clear trend.

At the same time, reports of drone strikes on regional energy infrastructure and threats to key shipping routes have kept risk premiums elevated

Key Driver: Strait of Hormuz Remains Critical

The biggest factor supporting oil prices remains the risk to the Strait of Hormuz, a vital global oil chokepoint.

  • The route handles roughly 20% of global oil flows
  • Any disruption could significantly tighten global supply

Markets remain highly sensitive to:

  • Military developments in the region
  • Political statements from major players
  • Updates on shipping access

This explains why oil remains elevated even during temporary pullbacks.

Market Structure: Strong Rally Followed by Consolidation

The current price action reflects a transition from:

  • Explosive rally → driven by geopolitical shock
  • Consolidation phase → driven by uncertainty

Recent data shows:

  • Oil surged more than 11% in a single session last week
  • Prices remain up sharply over the past month

This suggests the market is pausing, not reversing

Oil Forecast: What Comes Next?

Short-Term Outlook: Volatile Range

Analysts expect oil to remain highly volatile in the near term, trading within a wide range:

  • Support: $105–$108
  • Resistance: $111–$115

Direction will depend almost entirely on geopolitical headlines

Bullish Scenario (Supply Shock Continues)

  • Escalation in conflict
  • Continued disruption in shipping routes
    Oil could push toward $115–$120+

Bearish Scenario (De-escalation Confirmed)

  • Ceasefire agreement
  • Reopening of supply routes
    Oil could fall back below $100

Medium-Term Outlook: Mixed Institutional Views

Longer-term forecasts remain divided:

  • The International Energy Agency (IEA) warns that high prices are already reducing demand growth, which could limit upside later in 2026.
  • Meanwhile, J.P. Morgan expects Brent to average significantly lower over time, assuming normalization in supply conditions.

This highlights a key dynamic:

  • Short term = geopolitics-driven bullish pressure
  • Long term = fundamentals may pull prices lower

What Traders Should Watch

  1. Geopolitical Headlines (Primary Driver)

Oil is currently headline-driven, with every update moving the market.

  1. Strait of Hormuz Developments

Any confirmation of reopening or escalation will be a major catalyst.

  1. Price Behavior Around $106

This level is now a key psychological zone:

  • Holding above it → bullish continuation
  • Falling below → deeper correction
  1. Demand Signals

High prices are beginning to impact consumption, which may influence future price direction.

Bottom Line

Oil prices are holding near the $106 level as markets navigate a complex mix of geopolitical escalation and ceasefire hopes. While supply risks continue to support prices, increasing uncertainty and early signs of demand pressure are keeping the market in a volatile consolidation phase, with the next major move dependent on developments in the Middle East.