WTI crude in October 2025 bottomed near five-month lows (~$55) and transitioned to firm price action within a $55–65 range. Two factors supported this transition. First, additional US sanctions on Russia's Rosneft elevated uncertainty around Russian crude supply. Second, the announcement of US SPR (Strategic Petroleum Reserve) build plans provided government-backed demand support at the lows.
However, a countervailing force was simultaneously present. The IEA published a report forecasting expanding global oil supply surplus in 2026, bringing medium-term supply looseness to market awareness. The equilibrium between these upward and downward forces is the maintenance mechanism of the current range.
The defining characteristic of the current market is the simultaneous operation of "short-term supply risks (sanctions, SPR)" and the "medium-term supply-demand outlook (IEA)" — forces operating on different timescales. Short-term factors support the price floor; medium-term factors suppress the ceiling. This asymmetric dynamic is generating the range-bound market.
The most important observation of the month is the significant change the forward curve experienced in a short period. The sequence was: backwardation narrowing (spot supply concerns easing, near-month premium dissipating) → flat (buying and selling forces balancing, curve approaching horizontal) → contango (IEA surplus outlook penetrating market consciousness, pre-emptive pricing of future supply surplus) → return to backwardation (tightening Rosneft sanctions and geopolitical tension around Hormuz re-elevating short-term supply risk premium).
Experiencing a complete cycle of backwardation → flat → contango → backwardation within a single month demonstrates the instability of market participants' supply-demand perceptions. When curve shape lacks stability, taking large directional positions tends to be viewed as carrying elevated risk.
Particularly noteworthy in this period's curve volatility was the temperature gap between the short end (within 6 months) and the long end (beyond 6 months). The short-dated front end reacted sensitively to geopolitical risks (sanctions, Hormuz) and moved significantly. In contrast, the long-dated back end maintained a relatively stable contango, reflecting the IEA's surplus forecast.
The short-term vs. long-term temperature gap means the market is separately pricing "short-term uncertainty (geopolitical)" and "long-term certainty (supply surplus)." The timing when this temperature gap resolves — when front and back end move in the same direction — will serve as the signal for a structural market transition.
October 2025 was an extremely unstable market environment in which the forward curve completed a full cycle within a single month. While the $55–65 range is being maintained, supply-demand perceptions are swinging sharply within it. From November onward, the central market question becomes whether the IEA's surplus forecast materializes, or whether geopolitical risk prevails.