As Oil Price Crashes, The Question Lingers: Who Will Win The Oil Price War?

Hamilton Nwosa
Writer

Ad

Ambassadors face delays in scheduling presentation of letters of credence to Tinubu

By Obinna Uballa Fresh concerns are mounting within diplomatic circles over the prolonged delay in the formal presentation of letters of credence to President Bola Tinubu by several foreign ambassadors-designate currently posted to Nigeria. The situation, which comes amid heightened diplomatic unease between Nigeria and the United States, is raising questions about Nigeria’s foreign policy…

Cameroon’s Paul Biya Sworn in for Eighth Term

By Abiola Olawale Paul Biya, the world's oldest sitting president and one of the longest-serving non-monarch leaders, has been sworn in on Thursday for his eighth term as President of Cameroon. Biya, a 92-year-old leader, who has been at the helm of the Central African nation for 43 years, will now serve another seven-year mandate,…

Nnamdi Kanu urges Trump to investigate alleged killings in South East

By Obinna Uballa Detained leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, has appealed to United States President Donald Trump to order an independent investigation into alleged killings and persecution of Christians and Igbo communities in the South East. Kanu made the appeal in a letter dated November 6, 2025, which was transmitted…

Ad

  • Time To Blink In COVID-Infected Oil Price War

 

By Editorial Dept 

As the oil price war continues, with the Saudis holding out and flooding the market with oil, the next logical stage is full-beyond-capacity storage facilities. It’s a situation that has some worried we could see oil drop below $10 a barrel.

Last week, we said that our high-level sources are confident that the Saudis will not let this completely destroy the American shale patch, while the Russians are gunning for just that. Our sources still stand by that scenario from the Saudi perspective, while the Russians are getting media out there to the effect that the U.S. is about to lose the war over European market share.

But what is happening here is that the oil price war is being compounded by the coronavirus and a near-global slowdown of activity, so we’re going to reach $15 oil a lot faster than we would otherwise.

The difficult part to predict will be the psychology of MBS and Putin – two very strong personalities who cannot back down without a clear, agreed-upon path that makes it look like they both won in different ways.

But Russia stands to lose nearly $40 billion in this game, and the Saudis can withstand more. MBS will force Russia to blink first, even if Moscow insists it’s going to keep pumping all the way to $10 oil. Saudi Arabia on Wednesday said it would pump 12.3 million bpd into the market over the coming months as a direct challenge to Russia. The question remains: Who will win the Oil price War?

. The Content was culled from OilPrice.com

Ad

Unlocking Opportunities in the Gulf of Guinea during UNGA80
X whatsapp