Crude Oil (petroleum); Dated Brent Monthly Price - Singapore Dollar per Barrel

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2021 - Mar 2026: 45.138 (51.58%)
Chart

Description: Crude oil, UK Brent 38° API.

Unit: Singapore Dollar per Barrel



Source: Bloomberg; Energy Intelligence Group (EIG); Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC); World Bank.

See also: Energy production and consumption statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Crude oil is a liquid hydrocarbon mixture refined into transportation fuels, heating fuels, petrochemical feedstocks, and many industrial products. On commodity markets, it is commonly priced by benchmark grades rather than by a single uniform product, because crude quality varies by density, sulfur content, and refinery yield. For international pricing, Dated Brent is a widely used benchmark for light, sweet crude from the North Sea, quoted on a free-on-board basis and measured in US dollars per barrel. It serves as a reference for physical cargoes and for many linked contracts in Europe, Africa, and parts of the Middle East.

Crude oil is typically measured in barrels, with one barrel equal to 42 US gallons. Market participants compare benchmark grades against Dated Brent through differentials that reflect quality, freight, and regional supply-demand conditions. The benchmark matters because it anchors pricing for a large share of seaborne crude trade and helps connect physical markets with futures, swaps, and term contracts.

Supply Drivers

Crude oil supply is shaped by geology, field decline rates, investment cycles, and transport infrastructure. Production is concentrated in regions with large sedimentary basins and established export systems, including the Middle East, North America, Russia, West Africa, and the North Sea. Conventional fields often require substantial upfront capital and long lead times, while shale and other tight-oil plays respond more quickly to price signals but depend on continuous drilling to offset rapid well decline.

Supply is also sensitive to weather and operational disruptions. Offshore production can be affected by storms, while Arctic, desert, and deepwater projects face high technical and logistical costs. Pipeline capacity, port access, tanker availability, and refinery intake constraints influence how easily crude reaches benchmark markets. Because crude oil is a depleting resource, field maintenance, enhanced recovery, and exploration spending are persistent determinants of output.

Seasonal maintenance at refineries and export terminals can alter crude flows, and unplanned outages can tighten nearby grades. Quality differences matter as well: light, sweet crudes generally command different pricing than heavier, more sulfur-rich grades because they yield different product slates and require different refining configurations.

Demand Drivers

Crude oil demand is driven primarily by transport fuels, petrochemicals, industrial heat, and some power generation. Road transport, aviation, shipping, and diesel-intensive freight systems are the largest end uses in many consuming regions. Petrochemical demand links crude oil to plastics, solvents, synthetic fibers, and other chemical intermediates, making oil demand partly a function of broader industrial activity and consumer goods production.

Demand is relatively sensitive to income and trade activity because transportation and manufacturing volumes rise and fall with economic output. Seasonal patterns also matter: gasoline demand often strengthens during driving seasons, while heating oil demand increases in colder periods in regions that use oil-based heating. In some markets, crude competes with natural gas, coal, biofuels, and electricity in specific uses, although substitution is limited by infrastructure and equipment.

Long-run demand is shaped by vehicle efficiency, fuel switching, refinery configuration, and the pace at which alternative energy sources penetrate transport and industry. Even where substitution occurs, the installed base of engines, aircraft, ships, pipelines, and petrochemical plants creates slow adjustment, so demand responds gradually to structural change.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Crude oil is highly sensitive to the US dollar because it is priced internationally in dollars; a stronger dollar tends to raise local-currency costs for non-US buyers and can weigh on demand. Interest rates matter through financing costs, inventory holding costs, and broader economic activity. When storage is expensive or inventories are abundant, futures markets often show contango; when prompt supply is tight, backwardation can appear as buyers pay a premium for immediate barrels.

Oil also behaves as a cyclical commodity tied to industrial production, freight activity, and risk sentiment. It can show partial inflation-hedge characteristics because energy costs feed into transportation, manufacturing, and consumer prices, but it also reacts strongly to recession risk and changes in expected fuel consumption. Financial positioning in futures and options can amplify short-term moves, especially when physical supply is constrained.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 202187.51-
Apr 202186.41-1.26%
May 202190.584.82%
Jun 202197.417.54%
Jul 2021100.793.48%
Aug 202194.88-5.86%
Sep 2021100.606.03%
Oct 2021113.0012.33%
Nov 2021109.54-3.07%
Dec 2021101.51-7.33%
Jan 2022115.5313.81%
Feb 2022128.9411.61%
Mar 2022157.1321.86%
Apr 2022144.46-8.06%
May 2022155.327.52%
Jun 2022166.156.97%
Jul 2022151.87-8.59%
Aug 2022136.49-10.13%
Sep 2022127.49-6.60%
Oct 2022132.684.07%
Nov 2022126.49-4.67%
Dec 2022109.46-13.46%
Jan 2023110.210.68%
Feb 2023110.06-0.13%
Mar 2023105.34-4.29%
Apr 2023112.036.35%
May 2023101.34-9.54%
Jun 2023100.85-0.49%
Jul 2023106.775.87%
Aug 2023116.368.98%
Sep 2023128.2510.21%
Oct 2023124.67-2.79%
Nov 2023112.26-9.96%
Dec 2023103.98-7.37%
Jan 2024107.173.06%
Feb 2024112.625.09%
Mar 2024114.511.68%
Apr 2024122.206.71%
May 2024110.81-9.32%
Jun 2024111.600.71%
Jul 2024114.852.92%
Aug 2024106.40-7.36%
Sep 202496.34-9.46%
Oct 202499.052.82%
Nov 202499.450.41%
Dec 202499.500.04%
Jan 2025107.898.44%
Feb 2025101.26-6.14%
Mar 202596.97-4.24%
Apr 202589.75-7.45%
May 202583.12-7.38%
Jun 202591.7610.39%
Jul 202590.90-0.93%
Aug 202587.68-3.55%
Sep 202587.30-0.43%
Oct 202583.71-4.11%
Nov 202582.94-0.93%
Dec 202581.01-2.33%
Jan 202685.815.93%
Feb 202690.135.03%
Mar 2026132.6547.17%

Top Companies

Saudi Aramco
Website: http://www.saudiaramco.com/
Location: Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
Estimated Production: 8.5 million barrels per day

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