Goldman Sachs flags upside risks to oil prices in near term and into 2027

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Goldman Sachs warns of oil price risks due to supply shocks, with Brent crude possibly above $100 per barrel. Iran-Israel conflict and Strait of Hormuz uncertainty elevate risks.

By Reuters March 20, 2026, 8:43:48 AM IST (Published)

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Goldman Sachs said on Thursday that risks to oil prices remain skewed to the upside both in the ​near term and into 2027. The bank added that the persistence ‌of several past large supply shocks highlights the possibility that oil prices could remain above $100 per barrel.

Benchmark Brent crude surged above $119 a barrel on Thursday after Iran attacked energy ​facilities across the Middle East in response to Israel's strike ​on its South Pars gas field, marking a sharp escalation ⁠in a war that is now in its third week. The war has ​triggered widespread shutdowns across Gulf states.

Goldman Sachs said its base case assumes ​a gradual recovery in oil flows from April, with Brent easing to the $70s by the fourth quarter of 2026, but warned that risks to the long-term outlook remain ​elevated due to the Iran war and uncertainty over the reopening of ​the Strait of Hormuz.


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The bank said supply could remain constrained for longer if production ‌capacity ⁠is damaged, though output could rise if OPEC deploys spare capacity once flows resume.

Goldman said the shock linked to Hormuz would be the largest on record and analysed the persistence of production losses across the five biggest ​supply disruptions of the ​past 50 ⁠years.

The bank's base case assumes oil production normalises within four weeks of a full reopening but flags meaningful downside ​risks to long-term supply, particularly from Iran and offshore ​production.

Goldman ⁠Sachs said in the short term oil prices are likely to keep rising while flows through the Strait of Hormuz remain constrained, adding that Brent ⁠could surpass ​its 2008 peak if disruption risks persist. It ​also said any increase in perceived risks of US export curbs could further widen the Brent-WTI ​spread.

(Edited by : Juviraj Anchil)

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