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Oil market faces ‘super glut’ as supply surge hits prices, Trafigura warns

By News Desk
December 10, 2025
Crude oil barrels stacked at a refinery can be seen in this undated image. — APP/File
Crude oil barrels stacked at a refinery can be seen in this undated image. — APP/File

The oil market faces a ‘super glut’ next year as a burst of new supply collides with weakness in the global economy, Trafigura, one of the world’s biggest commodity traders, has warned, reports ‘Financial Times’.

Saad Rahim, chief economist of Trafigura, said on Tuesday that new drilling projects and slowing demand growth were likely to weigh further on already depressed crude prices next year.“Whether it’s a glut, or a super glut, it’s hard to get away from that,” Rahim said in remarks alongside the company’s annual results.

Brent crude has fallen 16 per cent this year, on track for its worst year since 2020. Prices are expected to be further damped by major projects coming online next year, including in Brazil and Guyana.

“China needs to keep buying at this rate, for that super glut to not show up even earlier,” Rahim added.Trafigura reported net profits of $2.7 billion during the fiscal year that ended in September, down slightly from $2.8 billion the previous year -- and representing a five-year low after years of bumper profits linked to Russia’s full invasion of Ukraine.

Its metals division reported a record year, due in part to the profits made by shipping copper into the US amid the disruptions caused by whipsawing tariff rules, according to people familiar with the matter.

Trafigura chief executive Richard Holtum said “significant headline-driven volatility” had been a major driver for markets this year and that the trend would continue in 2026.“Trading conditions were not easy last year and our trading team put on a really credible performance across all divisions,” said Holtum.

However, the small drop in profits, combined with rising payouts to Trafigura’s employee-shareholders, meant group equity fell slightly, to $16.2 billion, from $16.3 billion the previous year -- marking the first time this figure has shrunk in almost a decade.

Payouts to Trafigura’s employees rose to $2.9 billion, up from $2 billion during the prior year. The company, whose top management is based in Geneva, pays out “dividends” to its employee-shareholders, including by buying back the shares of departing employees over time.

The large number of departures among senior Trafigura staff over the past two years has put pressure on the dividend programme, prompting the board to slow the pace of share repurchases.

Ben Luckock, head of oil trading at Trafigura, said in October that he expected oil prices could fall below $60 a barrel before rallying. “I suspect we’ll go into the $50s at some point across Christmas and the new year,” he said at the time.