Crude Oil (petroleum); West Texas Intermediate Monthly Price - Indian Rupee per Barrel

Data as of March 2026

Range
Jul 2023 - Mar 2026: 2,168.437 (34.54%)
Chart

Description: Crude oil, US, West Texas Intermediate (WTI) 40° API.

Unit: Indian Rupee 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

West Texas Intermediate (WTI) is a light, sweet crude oil benchmark used in commodity markets to price physical crude and financial derivatives. It is typically quoted in U.S. dollars per barrel, with the delivery point associated with Cushing, Oklahoma, a major inland storage and pipeline hub in the United States. WTI serves as a reference grade for North American crude pricing and is widely used in futures contracts, swaps, and related hedging instruments. As a benchmark, it reflects the value of a relatively low-sulfur crude that is easier and less costly to refine into transportation fuels and other petroleum products than heavier, sour grades. Its market role is tied not only to the quality of the crude itself but also to the logistics of moving oil into and out of the Cushing hub, where pipeline connectivity and storage capacity influence local pricing relationships. WTI is one of the principal reference prices in global energy markets and is commonly compared with Brent crude and Dubai crude.

Supply Drivers

WTI supply is shaped by geology, drilling economics, and transport infrastructure. The benchmark is closely linked to crude produced in the United States, especially from onshore basins in Texas and neighboring regions, where output depends on reservoir characteristics, well productivity, and the cost of drilling and completion. Unlike agricultural commodities, crude oil supply does not follow a harvest cycle, but it does respond to depletion rates, decline curves, and the time required to bring new wells online. Shale and tight-oil production can adjust more quickly than conventional fields, yet it still requires capital, labor, equipment, and pipeline access. Weather can disrupt production and transport through hurricanes, freezes, or flooding, particularly in producing and refining regions along the Gulf Coast and inland pipeline networks. Because WTI is priced at Cushing, storage availability and pipeline flows are central to supply conditions at the benchmark point. Bottlenecks between producing basins, storage hubs, and coastal export or refining centers can create local dislocations even when broader crude supply is ample.

Demand Drivers

Demand for WTI is driven by the broad use of crude oil as a feedstock for transportation fuels, petrochemicals, heating fuels, and industrial energy. Refiners buy crude according to its quality characteristics, with light sweet grades generally favored for producing gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, and naphtha with lower processing costs. End demand is therefore linked to road transport, aviation, freight, manufacturing, and chemical production. Seasonal patterns matter because gasoline demand tends to rise during driving seasons, while heating fuel demand is stronger in colder periods in some regions. Substitution occurs across crude grades: refiners can switch among light, medium, heavy, sweet, and sour crudes depending on relative prices, refinery configuration, and product yields. Over the long run, demand is also shaped by vehicle efficiency, petrochemical consumption, and the extent to which natural gas, electricity, biofuels, and other energy sources substitute for petroleum products. Because crude oil is embedded in global supply chains, industrial activity and consumer spending influence demand through their effect on transport and manufacturing throughput.

Macro and Financial Drivers

WTI is sensitive to the U.S. dollar because crude oil is priced internationally in dollars; a stronger dollar tends to make oil more expensive in local-currency terms for non-U.S. buyers, while a weaker dollar can support demand. Interest rates matter because crude and refined products are storable commodities: higher financing costs raise the expense of holding inventories, while lower rates reduce carry costs. This affects futures curve structure, including contango and backwardation, as storage economics influence whether market participants prefer to hold physical barrels or defer delivery. WTI also responds to broader risk sentiment because energy demand is tied to industrial activity and transport volumes. As a liquid benchmark, it is used by producers, refiners, airlines, and traders for hedging, so financial positioning can amplify short-term price moves relative to physical fundamentals.

MonthPriceChange
Jul 20236,277.48-
Aug 20236,738.737.35%
Sep 20237,440.3810.41%
Oct 20237,122.36-4.27%
Nov 20236,449.21-9.45%
Dec 20236,004.22-6.90%
Jan 20246,145.882.36%
Feb 20246,363.313.54%
Mar 20246,680.484.98%
Apr 20247,055.175.61%
May 20246,573.48-6.83%
Jun 20246,585.220.18%
Jul 20246,734.102.26%
Aug 20246,338.37-5.88%
Sep 20245,828.31-8.05%
Oct 20246,016.153.22%
Nov 20245,878.22-2.29%
Dec 20245,922.030.75%
Jan 20256,484.499.50%
Feb 20256,210.80-4.22%
Mar 20255,875.77-5.39%
Apr 20255,393.28-8.21%
May 20255,200.06-3.58%
Jun 20255,794.9411.44%
Jul 20255,805.490.18%
Aug 20255,608.18-3.40%
Sep 20255,623.710.28%
Oct 20255,317.77-5.44%
Nov 20255,287.49-0.57%
Dec 20255,219.89-1.28%
Jan 20265,447.554.36%
Feb 20265,858.567.54%
Mar 20268,445.9244.16%

Top Companies

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

Commodities Market

  • Buyers: Request price quotes
  • Sellers: List your products
Sign up to get an email when we update our commodities data

 


Your email will never be shared, sold, nor rented. We hate SPAM as much you do.
Coming Soon