Energy Market Research:
Marcus VaneDr. Elara ChenMichael Chen, CFADr. Helena ChenElena SterlingElena VossPetroEyes Research Team
Public Data Plus Editorial Context

Oil & Gas
Market Research.

Crude oil prices, EIA inventory changes, Baker Hughes rig activity, LNG flows, refinery signals, and energy-equity context explained with source notes and clear limits.

Why This Is Not Just A Price Feed

PetroEyes Adds Context To Public Energy Data

A benchmark price tells you where the market traded. It does not tell you whether inventories are seasonal, whether rigs are moving in the right basin, or whether a company's payout depends on a single commodity assumption. PetroEyes connects those pieces in plain language.

We use public and reputable sources first, then add editorial judgment: what changed, what did not change, which source is lagged, and what a reader should verify before treating a signal as durable.

Reader-First Checks We Apply

Source trail: price, inventory, rig, policy, and company claims point back to EIA, Baker Hughes, IEA, OPEC, filings, or other reputable sources.
Original explanation: articles translate the data into spreads, bottlenecks, balance-sheet risk, and seasonal demand effects.
No personal advice: market and equity pages are educational research, not investment, tax, legal, or trading advice.
Freshness labels: time-sensitive pages show dates or update cadence so stale data is easier to spot.

Research Standards

PetroEyes adds value by connecting public energy data to practical market questions: supply, demand, transport capacity, inventories, refining margins, and company exposure.

Read Methodology

Primary data first

EIA, Baker Hughes, IEA, OPEC, company filings, and official policy releases are preferred for time-sensitive claims.

Context over price calls

Articles separate reported data, model assumptions, and opinion so readers can judge the strength of each claim.

Useful comparisons

Pages connect WTI, Brent, WCS, AECO, rig counts, inventories, and energy equities where the relationship helps the reader.

Clear disclaimers

Market and equity content is educational only and is not personalized investment advice.

Market Research Briefing

Oil and gas markets in 2026 are being shaped by three practical questions: whether supply growth can keep pace with demand, how quickly transport bottlenecks change regional prices, and which companies can fund dividends without assuming permanently high crude prices.

1. Data Center Demand: Useful Signal, Not A Shortcut

Data-center power demand is adding a new layer to natural gas analysis, but weather, storage, LNG exports, and pipeline constraints still matter. PetroEyes separates durable demand signals from short-term headlines so readers can see what is supported by data.

2. Logistics Spreads: Beyond TMX

Pipeline and LNG capacity can change realized prices long before global benchmarks move. Canadian producers, refiners, shippers, and investors all need to watch the WCS-WTI spread, TMX utilization, storage levels, and Asian LNG demand together.

3. Equity Lens: Payouts Need Stress Testing

Equity analysis should not stop at dividend yield. PetroEyes looks at decline rates, reserve life, debt, sustaining capital, hedges, transportation access, and commodity sensitivity before treating a payout as durable.

Educational market briefing | Source-backed analysis | Updated June 2026

Expert Lead

Marcus Vane

Marcus Vane

Macro Energy Editor

PetroEyes reviews energy data as educational market research. We do not provide personalized commodity, equity, tax, or legal advice.

Read About PetroEyes

Methodology Citation

  • EIA Inventory: WEEKLY
  • OPEC Output: MONTHLY
  • Basis Pricing: DAILY
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