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Traders lock in oil price amid geopolitical risks from Iran, and more Venezuelan supply

Traders lock in oil price amid geopolitical risks from Iran, and more Venezuelan supply
Traders lock in oil price amid geopolitical risks from Iran, and more Venezuelan supply

Investors were rushing to lock in record oil prices in January, amid fears about Iranian crude supplies and Venezuelan barrels headed to the U.S. Gulf Coast.

By locking in an oil price, hedging can reduce the risk for producers and protect their production from sudden changes in the market. It also gives traders the opportunity to profit during times of market volatility. Investors traded an unprecedented number of WTI contracts at Houston, which is a benchmark price for?exported U.S. Crude, on the Intercontinental Exchange, according to?exchange statistics. 1.9 million WTI contracts were traded last month.

On January 30, 2026 traders also set a record for WTI Midland in Houston on the ICE. They traded 257,569 contract when U.S. Crude Futures hovered around a six month?high due to tensions between Washington, D.C. and Tehran.

U.S. crude oil futures closed around $65 per barrel on the 30th of January, up about 14% since the first trading day.

Jeff Barbuto is the senior vice president for global oil markets at ICE. He says that geopolitical tensions in Iran have influenced the risk premiums on the oil market, while the severe winter weather conditions in the U.S. affected production and refinery dynamics. Analysts estimate that the winter storm reduced crude production by as much as two million bpd at its peak in late December.

Traders also moved a record number of 188,000 contracts in ICE Houston Western - Canadian Select futures.

Barbuto said that the return of Venezuelan oil has brought new competition to Canadian oil in the U.S. Gulf Coast and other export markets including China. On January 6, the WCS benchmark price set a record for volume in a single day of 19,965 tons. This was the same day that Washington and Caracas signed a deal allowing Venezuelan crude oil to be exported to the United States up to $2 billion. (Reporting and editing by Sonali Paul in Houston, Georgina McCartney from Houston)

(source: Reuters)