Wednesday, April 23, 2025
spot_img

Goldman Sachs Slashes Oil Forecasts Again, Warns Of $40 Brent In ‘Extreme’ Tariff-Driven Recession Scenario

After having cut its oil forecasts twice in less than a week, analysts at Goldman Sachs cut their annual forecasts for Brent and West Texas Intermediate Crude for 2025 and 2026 yet again, warning of a worst-case scenario involving a tariff-driven global recession and higher supply by the OPEC+ nations.

What Happened: On Monday, Goldman Sachs once again revised its annual forecasts for Brent and WTI crude prices at $62 and $58 a barrel for December 2025 and $55 and $51 for December 2026, respectively, reported Bloomberg. At the time of writing this, crude oil trades at $64 Brent and $60 WTI.

See More: Will Trump Impose Higher Tariffs On China? Crypto Bettors Now See An 80% Possibility

This downward revision remains in line with the firm’s earlier decision to raise the probability of a recession in the U.S. to 45% over the next 12 months, up from 35% early last month, in response to the intensifying global trade war that can plunge the world into a recession.

It further adds in the note that these forecasts have been made under two assumptions, the first being that the U.S. economy avoids a recession, with a significant reduction in the proposed tariffs. Second, the supply from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC+) rises moderately with two increments of 130,000 to 140,000 barrels.

In a more “extreme” scenario, where a global recession aligns with a full OPEC+ unwind, which the bank says is “less likely,” Brent could fall just below $40 a barrel in late 2026, a level not seen since the COVID-19 pandemic.

Why It Matters: After starting April at $70 a barrel, NYMEX WTI prices dipped below $60 on Monday morning, a level not seen in four years, before rebounding in the afternoon at $60.70. Energy analysts see the $60 mark as a key threshold, below which most producers will scale back their activity.

According to Marshal Adkins, the head of energy at Raymond James Financial Inc RJF, oil prices below $60 will push the U.S. into a slowdown, ‘there is no question about it,’ he adds while speaking to Fortune.

Read More: Trump Tariffs Trigger Historic Equity Wipeout Outpacing COVID, Lehman Crashes, With No Bond Rally To Cushion The Blow, Says Lawrence McDonald

Image via Shutterstock

Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs

© 2025 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

Powered by SlickText.com

Hot this week

Want $100K Before 40? Fed Study Reveals List Of College Majors That Pay The Most

If you want a six‑figure paycheck before you hit...

Demystifying Invesco: Insights From 19 Analyst Reviews

During the last three months, 19 analysts shared their...

A Glimpse Into The Expert Outlook On Quest Diagnostics Through 12 Analysts

During the last three months, 12 analysts shared their...

Forecasting The Future: 5 Analyst Projections For Arcus Biosciences

During the last three months, 5 analysts shared their...

Analyst Expectations For Moodys’s Future

Throughout the last three months, 9 analysts have evaluated...

Topics

Demystifying Invesco: Insights From 19 Analyst Reviews

During the last three months, 19 analysts shared their...

A Glimpse Into The Expert Outlook On Quest Diagnostics Through 12 Analysts

During the last three months, 12 analysts shared their...

Forecasting The Future: 5 Analyst Projections For Arcus Biosciences

During the last three months, 5 analysts shared their...

Analyst Expectations For Moodys’s Future

Throughout the last three months, 9 analysts have evaluated...

Utz Brands Stock: A Deep Dive Into Analyst Perspectives (5 Ratings)

Analysts' ratings for Utz Brands UTZ over the last...

Is British American Tobacco Gaining or Losing Market Support?

British American Tobacco's BTI short percent of float has...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_img