Oil is limping to the finish line of 2025, and it's not pretty. After an encouraging start to the year, crude quickly settled into classic bear market behavior: steady downward drift punctuated by brief, violent rallies that go nowhere.
Even the big oil companies felt the pain differently. ConocoPhillips (COP) dropped 8.3% year-to-date, while Exxon Mobil (XOM) somehow squeezed out an 11% gain. That's the beauty of energy markets – same commodity, very different results.
Looking ahead to 2026, something unusual is happening: virtually every major institution agrees oil is going lower. J.P. Morgan pencils in $53 per barrel. Goldman Sachs says $52 as global surpluses pile up. Morgan Stanley, Citi, and the US Energy Information Administration are all singing from the same hymn sheet, pointing to oversupply from non-OPEC+ producers and sluggish economic momentum. Bank of America is slightly more generous at $57, but they're still highlighting downside risks like potential peace in Ukraine, a friendlier Venezuelan government, or economic deterioration.
Here's the thing about commodity markets: when everyone agrees on something, it's worth questioning whether they're right.
Why Pessimism Might Be Overdone
That wall of bearishness is precisely what makes oil interesting for contrarians heading into next year. Yes, the forecasts dominate headlines, but underneath the surface, structural problems are quietly building pressure.
Think back to the 2020 oil crash. After that disaster, investment in new production basically froze. ESG concerns only made things worse, thinning out the pipeline of future projects. According to the IEA, discovery rates are still weak, major long-cycle projects got shelved, and existing oil fields are naturally declining at a steady clip. Supply doesn't just magically appear when prices tick up.
Then there's OPEC+, which keeps demonstrating its willingness to protect price floors. Reuters reports the cartel has repeatedly delayed production increases to support the market. That creates an interesting dynamic: limited downside protection but plenty of room for upside shocks if something unexpected happens.
Meanwhile, demand hasn't collapsed the way some expected. Aviation keeps growing, petrochemical demand stays solid, and emerging markets continue consuming. China's role remains murky but supportive, with strategic stockpiling and industrial needs quietly absorbing supply.
So we have a market expecting abundance while the actual supply system grows increasingly fragile. That's a setup worth watching.
The Bears Could Still Be Right
Of course, the contrarian play isn't a slam dunk. A global recession would crush demand. Faster-than-expected electric vehicle adoption could accelerate the energy transition. OPEC+ cohesion could fracture, flooding the market with supply. And US shale, while slowing down, might respond to higher prices faster than people think.
Timing matters too. Oil bear markets can drag on way longer than fundamentals suggest they should. Being right eventually doesn't help much if you're early by two years.
But here's what makes this interesting: extreme consensus, chronic underinvestment, and active supply management from OPEC+ create conditions for asymmetric returns. When nearly everyone expects weakness, even modest positive surprises can move prices significantly. That's the contrarian bet – not that oil will definitely soar, but that the risk-reward has quietly shifted in a way most people aren't seeing.
Price Watch: The United States Oil Fund (USO) is down 10.98% year-to-date.




