Group 1 - Oil prices experienced a significant drop due to indications that OPEC+ may decide to increase production again in November during the October meeting, erasing gains from the previous week [1] - WTI crude oil futures fell by 4% during trading, marking the largest decline since June, closing at $63.45 per barrel, a decrease of 3.45%, while Brent crude oil futures closed at $67.97 per barrel, down 3.08% [1] - OPEC+, led by Saudi Arabia, is considering increasing production by at least 137,000 barrels per day above the planned increase for next month, raising concerns about whether member countries have reached their production capacity limits [1] Group 2 - Geopolitical risks have decreased, with the U.S. and Israel discussing a plan to end the Gaza conflict, which could potentially reduce the "war premium" in oil prices if the conflict in the Middle East, a major oil supply region, comes to an end [2] - The IEA predicts a record oversupply of crude oil by 2026 as OPEC+ continues to restore production, while competitors outside the organization are also increasing output [2] - Despite China's oil stockpiling, Goldman Sachs forecasts that Brent crude oil prices may drop to the mid-$50 range next year [2]
OPEC+或再增产石油 WTI原油期货一度跌4%
Hua Er Jie Jian Wen·2025-09-29 23:41