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Holiday Markets Eye War Risks but Oil Refuses to Break Out

Oil markets are focused on Venezuela tensions and the suspension of crude oil loadings at Kazakhstan’s CPC terminal.

Venezuela Starts Cutting Production as Trump Ratchets Up His Strangling Strategy

– Donald Trump’s maximum pressure strategy on Venezuela is finally starting to impact Venezuela’s oil production, with state oil company PDVSA beginning to shut down wells in the Orinoco Belt amidst swelling inventories and ongoing tanker seizures.
– Venezuela’s oil production has been continuously growing in 2025, with the November average of 1.165 million b/d representing a 20% year-over-year increase.
– According to Bloomberg, PDVSA plans to reduce output in the Orinoco Belt by at least 25% to 500,000 b/d, which could shave some 15% off Venezuela’s total liquids production.
– Venezuela will curb production at its heaviest wells first, with extra-heavy Junin becoming the first basin to be slashed, keeping lighter fields that require less diluents operational for as long as possible.     
– Despite ongoing VLCC seizures, flows of diluents to Venezuela have not fully stopped, with Russian suppliers delivering four tankers of naphtha in December to date, however storing the upgraded bituminous crude is becoming a deal-breaker for PDVSA.

Market Movers

– Australia’s top energy producer Woodside Energy (ASX:WDS) signed a 9-year term LNG supply deal starting from 2030 to deliver around 5.8 billion m3 of liquefied gas from its Louisiana LNG project.

– US oil major Chevron (NYSE:CVX) has reported first oil from its South N’dola project offshore Angola, aiming to produce 25,000 b/d of crude and 50 MMCf/d of natural gas once the field reaches peak output.

– Russia’s government has extended its deadline to sell ExxonMobil’s (NYSE:XOM) 30% stake in the Sakhalin-I project by another year, potentially indicating Moscow’s readiness to re-integrate the US oil major into Sakhalin’s new shareholding structure after the Russia-Ukraine conflict ends.

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

In the relatively uneventful period between Christmas and New Year, Russia-Ukraine peace talks were the main geopolitical driver. Ukraine’s alleged targeting of Putin’s residence and Moscow’s pledge to change its negotiating strategy brought yet another wave of disappointment to those eyeing a resolution to the four-year-long conflict, capping ICE Brent at $62 per barrel. An all-out-war in Yemen could provide a new geopolitical risk to oil, however, the physical impact thereof remains questionable.

Saudi Arabia Mulls Extending Price Cuts. Saudi Arabia’s national oil firm Saudi Aramco (TADAWUL:2222) is expected to cut its formula prices for February-loading cargoes going to Asia by up to 30 cents per barrel, slashing prices further despite dipping to a 5-year low last month.

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