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Brent to trade above $95 for next two months on Iran war, EIA says

By Thomson Reuters Mar 10, 2026 | 12:51 PM

By Georgina McCartney, Arathy Somasekhar and Siddharth Cavale

HOUSTON, March 10 (Reuters) – Brent oil prices are set to trade above $95 a barrel over the next two months as the Iran war disrupts supplies, before falling to around $70 ​by the end of the year, the Energy Information Administration said ‌on Tuesday in a monthly report.

Oil shipments have been largely blocked from using the Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint through which a fifth of global oil flows every day, and this will cause Mideast oil output to fall further in the coming weeks, the EIA said in its Short-Term ‌Energy ​Outlook.

Saudi Arabia began oil output cuts, sources said on ⁠Monday, joining other Gulf producers ⁠including Iraq and Kuwait in reducing production amid the constraints. Those production shut-ins will gradually ease as transit resumes, the EIA said, adding that once oil flows are reestablished through the Strait, global oil production will continue to outpace ​demand.

Brent crude futures have risen around 21% so far this month, according to LSEG data, last trading at $88 a barrel at 12:35 p.m. EST.

The EIA raised ⁠its price forecast for Brent by 37% from ⁠the prior month to $79 a barrel in 2026. Brent should fall ​below $80 a barrel in the third quarter of this year, it said.

It also forecast ​U.S. retail gasoline prices to be around $3.34 a gallon, 14.7% higher than ‌its prior forecast, while it pushed up its forecast on diesel prices to $4.12 a gallon, about 20.1% higher than its previous forecast.

“Although we expect most of the gasoline price increase to be passed through to the retail price in the coming weeks, ⁠we also expect that the normalization of refining and retail margins will occur more slowly. The net effect will be continued upward pressure in the second quarter that lags ⁠behind the initial increase,” ‌the EIA said in the report.

Higher oil prices are set ⁠to encourage more U.S. crude production, with output expected to ​average 13.61 ‌million barrels per day this year, rising to 13.83 ​million bpd in ⁠2027, the EIA said.

That compares with the EIA’s previous forecasts of 13.6 million bpd for 2026, and 13.32 million bpd for 2027.

U.S. crude futures are up around 25% so far this month, last trading around $83.60 a barrel at 12:25 p.m. EST.

(Reporting by Georgina McCartney and Arathy Somasekhar in Houston and Siddharth Cavale in New York; Editing by Chizu ​Nomiyama and Susan Fenton)