Oil Remains Firm as Supply Shock Tests Trump’s Energy Claims
Oil stayed under strong upward pressure as the market continued to treat the current move as a live supply shock rather than a temporary spike. WTI traded at 106.402, up 7.579 points or 7.67%, after reaching a session high of 106.707. The broader message from price action was clear. Traders were not questioning whether the US can produce enough oil. They were focusing on the cost of a global disruption that continues to keep fuel, freight and input prices elevated.
Trump argued that the US has enough gas and oil to manage the shock, but oil pricing does not depend on domestic supply alone. When major shipping routes remain strained and replacement flows have to travel further, the cost still moves through the global system. Even if the US is better placed than large energy importers, businesses and consumers can still face higher prices.
Recent export data helps explain both sides of that argument. In March, US clean petroleum product exports rose to a record 3.11 million barrels per day, up from 2.5 million barrels per day in February. Europe took 414,000 barrels per day, Asia took 224,000 barrels per day, and Africa took 148,000 barrels per day. That supports the case that the US has barrels available to supply global markets. At the same time, it also shows why concerns over domestic inflation and growth remain valid. Strong export demand can help replace disrupted Middle East supply, but it can also keep the domestic balance tight and leave fuel prices elevated at home.
The immediate issue is not whether fuel physically runs out. It is whether costs stay high enough to slow spending and squeeze margins. US gasoline has already moved above $4 per gallon, while diesel has approached $5.50 per gallon. When transport, chemicals, freight and operating costs all move higher together, growth can weaken even without an outright shortage. That is why the market continues to focus on stagflation risk, where inflation stays firm while activity begins to slow.
From a technical perspective, oil still looks firmly supported. Price remains well above its major moving averages, with the 5-day at 102.55, the 10-day at 97.29, and the 20-day at 94.96, all still trending higher. Recent price action suggests buyers have stepped back in after the latest pullback, and the market continues to consolidate above the $100 level rather than break lower.
See why oil remains under pressure and what that means for inflation, trade and market sentiment.
Publication date: