Oil prices slip as U.S. inventory build looms and Greenland tariff talk spooks markets
21 January 2026
2 mins read

Oil prices slip as U.S. inventory build looms and Greenland tariff talk spooks markets

London, Jan 21, 2026, 11:59 GMT — Regular session

  • Brent slips toward $65 following a 1.5% rise the previous day
  • Traders debate the impact of Kazakhstan’s supply halt amid concerns over tariff-driven demand drops
  • Next up: stockpile data from API and EIA, delayed due to a U.S. holiday

Oil prices slipped on Wednesday, retreating from Tuesday’s rally as traders weighed forecasts of a U.S. crude stockpile increase alongside renewed trade tensions. By 1125 GMT, Brent futures had dropped 12 cents to $64.80 a barrel, and U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) eased 11 cents to $60.25. 1

The market faces a tug-of-war between short-term supply disruptions and growing worries that tariffs might slow growth and curb fuel demand. Prices remain locked in a narrow range, making upcoming U.S. stockpile reports a likely catalyst for movement—more so than news headlines. 1

The temporary halt at Kazakhstan’s Tengiz and Korolev fields remains, though the initial disruption has eased. Three industry insiders told Reuters the shutdown might extend for another seven to 10 days. Some export shipments have been scrapped, but other fields are boosting production to offset the shortfall. 2

Brent climbed 98 cents, or 1.53%, to close Tuesday at $64.92, boosted by the Kazakh production halt and stronger-than-anticipated Chinese economic figures that lifted demand hopes. The March WTI contract, more actively traded, jumped $1.02 to finish at $60.36 following the expiration of the February contract. 3

Ajay Parmar, ICIS director of energy and refining, described Tengiz as “certainly disruptive for crude flows” but noted the market views it as a short-term issue. He added that if tariff talk intensifies, “we expect prices to fall back.” 3

The tariff chatter picked up again. On Tuesday, Trump insisted there’s “no going back” on his aim to control Greenland, following earlier warnings about slapping new tariffs on several European nations if no agreement is struck. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen called the tariffs a mistake and said the EU is developing an Arctic security package. 3

U.S. crude stockpiles are shaping up as a near-term headwind. A Reuters poll of analysts predicts inventories climbed by roughly 1.7 million barrels in the week ending Jan. 16. Such a build usually points to weaker demand or an uptick in supply in the world’s largest oil consumer. 1

Timing is off this week. The American Petroleum Institute’s weekly data drops at 2130 GMT Wednesday, while the U.S. Energy Information Administration’s government report comes at 1700 GMT Thursday. Both got delayed by a federal holiday. 1

IG analyst Tony Sycamore described the Kazakh outage as temporary, cautioning that a likely increase in U.S. inventories might weigh on prices. UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo highlighted a more cautious “risk-off” mood, citing tariff threats that are fueling concerns over economic growth. 1

Tuesday’s rally got a boost from several factors that might not last: a softer dollar, rising diesel prices, and the IMF’s recent upward tweak to global growth forecasts, Reuters reported. These elements help, but they don’t solve the larger demand concerns tied to tariffs. 3

The International Energy Agency raised its 2026 global oil demand growth forecast to 930,000 barrels per day, up from 860,000 bpd, though it still projects supply will outpace demand by 3.69 million bpd. The agency pointed to “bloated balances” as a key factor keeping prices subdued. 4

The downside isn’t set in stone. Gregory Brew, senior analyst at Eurasia Group, noted that renewed U.S.-Iran tensions might keep prices elevated. Plus, the Kazakh shutdown could extend beyond initial estimates if operational problems persist. 1

Traders are eyeing U.S. inventory reports due Wednesday and Thursday next, along with news on when Tengiz and Korolev will resume normal output. They’re also watching for signs that tariff threats might shift from talk to a concrete timeline that could rattle markets. 1

Stock Market Today

NXP stock heads into Monday after $3 billion credit line refresh — what to watch for NXPI

NXP stock heads into Monday after $3 billion credit line refresh — what to watch for NXPI

8 February 2026
NXP Semiconductors shares closed up 1% at $224.32 Friday after subsidiaries amended a $3 billion revolving credit deal with Barclays, maturing in 2031. The PHLX semiconductor index surged 5.7% as chip stocks rallied on AI spending signals from Amazon and Alphabet. NXP’s gain lagged peers like Monolithic Power, which rose 6.4%. Investors await U.S. jobs and inflation data next week.
Cambricon Class A stock price dips again: what to watch next for China AI chip name 688256

Cambricon Class A stock price dips again: what to watch next for China AI chip name 688256

8 February 2026
Cambricon Technologies shares closed at 1,036.99 yuan in Shanghai on Friday, down 2.02%, with volume at about 8 million shares. The stock has fallen roughly 16.5% since Feb. 2 after sharp declines earlier in the week. Investors await the company’s next earnings report, due March 13, for confirmation of its forecasted profit turnaround. Cambricon is valued at about 437.28 billion yuan.
XRP price today: Ripple token slips below $2 as risk-off bites crypto ahead of Fed week
Previous Story

XRP price today: Ripple token slips below $2 as risk-off bites crypto ahead of Fed week

Natural gas price jumps again after Tuesday surge as Arctic cold tightens grip
Next Story

Natural gas price jumps again after Tuesday surge as Arctic cold tightens grip

Go toTop