1. 📆 Market Snapshot: From Summer Peak to Autumn Dip
Late August 2024: Brent hovered around $78–80/barrel, buoyed by strong seasonal demand, concerns over Libya’s output disruptions, and expectations of U.S. rate cuts
September 2024: Prices slid into the high $60s to low $70s, marking a more than 10% drop compared to August, as demand softened globally .
By Sept 5, Brent fell below $73—its weakest level since late 2023—prompting concern
2. 📉 Why the Decline?
Demand Softening
Cooling Chinese economic data, tepid U.S. job growth, and increased recession concerns weighed heavily on demand expectations
Rising Non‑OPEC+ Production
Record output from the U.S. and other non‑OPEC+ producers exacerbated the situation
3. 🔁 OPEC+ Reaction: Pause & Price‑Band Adjustments
In September, OPEC+ paused its planned October–November supply hikes (about 360 kbd) in response to the price slide
The pause was a deliberate move under their price‑band mechanism, designed to curb oversupply when prices fell too far
4. 💡 Why It Matters
The pause helped stabilize Brent around $70–75/barrel, preventing further decline
It showed OPEC+'s active role: willing to throttle supply downward to defend prices.
The intervention clearly signaled the group's price‑band mechanism in action—not just talk, but executed policy to mitigate market imbalances.
5. 🔮 Market Outlook
Short term: OPEC+'s supply restraint alongside signs of demand recovery hinted at a gradual rebound.
If demand recovers (e.g., China), or supply is disrupted, Brent could revisit $80–85.
If not, further adjustments may be needed.
Late Aug 2024: Brent was in the $78–80 range.
Early Sep 2024: Prices tumbled into the $68–72 range.
OPEC+ responded by invoking its price‑band mechanism—pausing planned increases to stabilize the market.
This was a textbook example of OPEC+ managing supply in real time: they used the price‑band to prevent a deeper slump, showing how coordinated policy can influence global oil benchmarks.