Russia’s President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with OPEC Secretary General Haitham Al Ghais during the Saint Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) in Saint Petersburg on June 20, 2025. The 28th edition of Saint Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) took place at the ExpoForum Convention and Exhibition Centre in Saint Petersburg on June 18-21, 2025. (Photo by Anton Vaganov / POOL / AFP) (Photo by ANTON VAGANOV/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
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Brent crude has drifted into the low-$60s, a price corridor OPEC+ has spent the better part of two years trying to defend through disciplined supply management. Yet the market’s center of gravity is shifting. Independent forecasts now point to a looming surplus of 2.1–4 million barrels per day in early 2026. Against that backdrop, OPEC+ has chosen what it calls a “strategic pause,” rolling over production quotas rather than deepening cuts.
The decision is meant to stabilize prices. But it raises a more fundamental question: Is OPEC+ still shaping the market, or merely reacting to forces now beyond its control?
The Cartel’s Dilemma
For most of its modern history, OPEC’s power was due to the fact that it controlled enough spare capacity to move prices at will. When demand weakened, it cut. When supply tightened, it opened the taps. That leverage is not gone, but it has been diluted.
Today’s oil market looks nothing like the cartel-dominated landscape of the past. Non-OPEC+ supply growth has become a significant factor. The United States, Brazil, and Guyana are adding barrels at a pace that offsets cartel restraint with unsettling consistency. The Energy Information Administration projects global petroleum liquids supply will rise by 1.9 million barrels per day in 2025 and another 1.6 million in 2026, driven largely by producers outside of OPEC+.
In response, OPEC+ is cutting production.
That dynamic explains the alliance’s increasingly uncomfortable posture. Every additional cut risks ceding more market share to competitors who show no sign of slowing. Yet easing restrictions risks driving prices below levels that many members simply cannot afford. The long game for OPEC+ is to manage this delicate balance until non-OPEC+ supply peaks and begins to decline. But at the same time, they are fighting against the clock in a world committed to moving away from oil.
The Price Floor Debate
For OPEC+, the low-$60s Brent range has become an informal price floor. But bearish sentiment is hardening. Economists now expect West Texas Intermediate to average about $59 in 2026, with Brent near $62. Goldman Sachs has warned that prices could slip into the low $50s if surpluses build as projected.
Those levels are important. At $55–$60 WTI, large portions of U.S. shale remain marginal but functional. Below that, drilling activity begins to slow. Ironically, OPEC+’s restraint may do more to protect U.S. producers from a deeper price collapse than to secure the cartel’s own fiscal stability.
Saudi Arabia’s budget arithmetic highlights the tension. Its fiscal breakeven oil price for 2025 is estimated near $91 per barrel—far above current market levels. Other OPEC+ members face even tighter constraints. The longer Brent—the international benchmark crude—lingers near $60, the more budget pressure builds across the alliance, forcing heavier reliance on borrowing, reserve drawdowns, and currency management.
In past cycles, that pressure would have prompted swift, aggressive intervention, or cheating on quotas. This time, the response is caution.
The U.S. Paradox and the New Supply Map
Non-OPEC+ supply growth is no longer a temporary disruption; it is the defining structural force of the oil market. U.S. shale, once dismissed as a short-cycle swing producer, has become a durable, manufacturing-style industry capable of sustaining output even through price downturns. Capital discipline has replaced growth-at-any-cost, but production efficiency continues to improve.
Brazil’s pre-salt fields are expanding with enormous capital backing and world-class reservoir quality. Guyana’s rise is even more surprising. The country has already surpassed 900,000 barrels per day and is targeting 1.7 million by 2030—an extraordinary figure for a nation that produced virtually nothing a decade ago.
These barrels are not marginal. They are structural, long-life, low-cost additions to global supply. And they arrive largely immune to OPEC+ coordination.
The cartel can still slow the tide, but it cannot reverse it. Each year that non-OPEC+ growth persists, OPEC+’s ability to enforce a durable price floor erodes.
Market Sentiment Has Already Shifted
The International Energy Agency’s projections reinforce the bearish narrative. A potential 2026 surplus of up to 4.1 million barrels per day would equal nearly 4% of global demand—enough to overwhelm storage and force painful price adjustments if not absorbed by unexpected demand growth.
Equity markets appear to be taking that risk seriously. Energy exchange-traded funds have moved largely sideways even as broader equity markets have swung with rate-cut expectations. Integrated oil majors are emphasizing shareholder returns over production growth. Buybacks and dividend discipline have replaced expansion rhetoric. Capital spending remains tightly constrained.
That behavior sends a clear signal: Management teams are not positioning for a sustained oil rally. They are positioning for a range-bound, surplus-prone market where the safest course is cash flow extraction rather than aggressive reinvestment.
Strength Or Desperation?
The strategic pause can be read two ways. Optimists see discipline—an alliance willing to sacrifice volume to avoid another price collapse. Pessimists see paralysis—a group that no longer knows how to respond without inflicting damage on itself.
Both interpretations carry elements of truth.
On one hand, OPEC+ is avoiding a destructive race for market share. That lesson was learned painfully during the 2014–2016 price war and again during the pandemic crash. On the other hand, restraint is losing its potency as non-OPEC+ volumes expand regardless of cartel action.
This is the defining shift of the modern oil market. OPEC+ remains influential—but it is no longer dominant over price.
Investor Takeaways
For energy investors, the strategic pause offers several clear signals:
First, the price corridor is fragile. Brent in the low $60s holds only if surpluses remain theoretical rather than physical. If inventories begin to build meaningfully, WTI in the mid-$50s becomes a realistic scenario—and that is where shale stress begins to accelerate.
Second, non-OPEC+ growth is now the dominant structural force. U.S., Brazilian, and Guyanese output continues to erode cartel leverage, cycle after cycle.
Third, equity positioning reflects caution, not confidence. Energy stocks remain range-bound because cash flow stability, not production growth, is the prevailing strategy.
Finally, policy overlays matter. A more permissive U.S. regulatory environment under a second Trump administration could further reinforce shale resilience through permitting, LNG approvals, and infrastructure expansion—adding yet another headwind to OPEC+’s control narrative.
A Market Entering A New Phase
OPEC+’s strategic pause looks less like a show of strength than a recognition of altered reality. The alliance remains a stabilizing force, but its ability to dictate prices is waning. The market is no longer governed primarily by cartel discipline. It is being shaped by decentralized, capital-disciplined producers operating across multiple continents.
This is not the end of OPEC+. But we may have seen the last of OPEC+ as the undisputed architect of oil pricing.
The next phase of the oil market will be defined less by coordinated restraint and more by persistent, structurally growing supply outside the cartel’s reach. For investors, that means recalibrating expectations. Surpluses—not shortages—are becoming the baseline risk. Cash flow reliability now matters more than reserve growth. And the balance of power in global oil is continuing to shift, quietly but decisively, away from the cartel that once ruled it.