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Goldman sees softer oil demand, flags two-sided risks to 2026 price outlook

By Thomson Reuters Apr 17, 2026 | 5:01 PM

April 17 (Reuters) – Goldman Sachs said softer oil demand and easing supply disruptions have balanced out the risks in its oil price outlook, though it kept ​its 2026 average forecasts unchanged.

The bank maintained its ‌Brent and WTI crude forecasts for 2026 at $83 a barrel and $78 a barrel, respectively, assuming oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz, a vital waterway through which about 20% of the world’s oil and ‌liquefied ​natural gas supplies pass, gradually normalize ⁠by mid-May.

• Crude prices settled ⁠down by around 9% on Friday on reported progress towards a potential peace deal, which Goldman said could lead to a faster unwinding of the geopolitical risk ​premium and send prices lower in the near-term. [O/R]

• The two sides have still not negotiated a permanent peace agreement. ⁠U.S. President Donald Trump once ⁠again suggested that the war could end soon, ​referring to expected weekend talks with Tehran. Iranian Foreign Minister ​Abbas Araqchi said the strait was open following a ‌ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon,

• While flows through the Strait of Hormuz remain sharply reduced, Goldman said downside risks have increased if Persian Gulf supply recovers more quickly than ⁠expected, helped by lower-than-anticipated production shut-ins and ample regional storage capacity.

• The bank said pronounced weakness in oil demand, particularly in petrochemical ⁠feedstocks and jet ‌fuel, driven by high refined product prices ⁠and margins, could push prices lower.

• Preliminary ​estimates ‌suggest global demand losses in early 2026 have ​been larger ⁠than more dramatic oil price spikes in 2011 and 2022, Goldman said.

• Demand weakness has been most evident in emerging markets in Asia and Africa, where consumption tends to be more price-sensitive, it added.

(Reporting by Anmol Choubey in Bengaluru; editing ​by David Gaffen)