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Monitor WTI, Brent Crude, and 50+ energy commodities with professional-grade analytics. Track price movements, analyze historical trends, and stay ahead of the energy markets with OilPri's comprehensive platform used by over 250,000 traders worldwide.
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Comprehensive energy market metrics updated in real-time from global exchanges
Interactive crude oil price visualization spanning the last 12 months of market data. Use the selectors below to switch between different commodities and timeframes for detailed technical analysis.
Complete overview of energy commodities traded on major global exchanges. All prices are denominated in USD and reflect the most recent available settlement prices. The spread between WTI and Brent crude remains a key indicator of global supply and demand dynamics, while natural gas prices continue to be influenced by seasonal weather patterns and LNG export capacity.
| Commodity | Price | Change | % Change | Volume | Open | High | Low |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WTI Crude Oil | $78.42 | +1.23 | +1.59% | 342,567 | $77.19 | $78.89 | $76.54 |
| Brent Crude | $82.17 | +0.98 | +1.21% | 287,891 | $81.19 | $82.65 | $80.72 |
| Natural Gas | $2.84 | -0.12 | -4.05% | 198,432 | $2.96 | $2.99 | $2.81 |
| Heating Oil | $2.67 | +0.04 | +1.52% | 89,234 | $2.63 | $2.71 | $2.61 |
| RBOB Gasoline | $2.31 | -0.03 | -1.28% | 112,876 | $2.34 | $2.37 | $2.28 |
| Uranium (U3O8) | $68.50 | +2.00 | +3.01% | 1,245 | $66.50 | $69.00 | $66.00 |
| Ethanol | $1.72 | +0.03 | +1.78% | 45,678 | $1.69 | $1.74 | $1.68 |
| Coal (Newcastle) | $134.20 | -1.80 | -1.32% | 3,456 | $136.00 | $137.50 | $133.50 |
Expert analysis from our team of energy market analysts covering the factors driving price movements across the global energy complex. Our analysis combines fundamental supply and demand data with technical chart patterns to provide actionable trading insights.
OPEC+ members have reaffirmed their commitment to voluntary production cuts extending through Q2 2026, removing approximately 2.2 million barrels per day from the market. Saudi Arabia continues to shoulder the largest share of cuts at 1 million bpd. Market analysts expect this disciplined approach to maintain a floor under crude oil prices, with WTI likely to trade in the $75-$85 range barring significant demand disruptions. The group's next ministerial meeting in March will be closely watched for signals about potential tapering of these cuts.
US crude oil production reached a new record of 13.5 million barrels per day in January 2026, according to the latest EIA data. The Permian Basin continues to be the primary growth driver, with operators achieving efficiency gains that have lowered breakeven costs below $40 per barrel in many areas. This sustained production growth partially offsets OPEC+ cuts and has contributed to building US commercial crude inventories above the five-year average. The EIA projects US output could reach 13.8 million bpd by year-end 2026.
China's crude oil imports showed mixed signals in early 2026, with January volumes declining 3% year-over-year while refinery throughput remained near record levels. The country's economic recovery continues at an uneven pace, with strong transportation fuel demand offset by weakness in petrochemical feedstock consumption. Analysts are divided on the outlook, with some pointing to government stimulus measures as potential catalysts for demand growth, while others cite the structural shift toward EVs and natural gas as headwinds for long-term oil consumption growth.
Ongoing geopolitical tensions in key producing regions continue to support a risk premium in crude oil prices estimated at $3-$5 per barrel. Shipping disruptions in the Red Sea have forced major tanker operators to reroute around the Cape of Good Hope, adding 10-14 days to voyage times and increasing freight costs. Additionally, sanctions on Russian oil exports continue to reshape global trade flows, with Russian crude increasingly flowing to India and China at discounts to international benchmarks. Any escalation in these tensions could trigger further price spikes.
Understanding historical price patterns is essential for forecasting future movements. Crude oil prices are influenced by a complex interplay of supply and demand fundamentals, geopolitical events, currency fluctuations, and speculative activity. The following visualization compares current prices against historical averages to provide context for today's market conditions.
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