Oil Price Collapse: From $107 to $27
Crude oil crashed 75% in 19 months. Energy stocks were devastated.
OPEC's decision not to cut production in November 2014, combined with the U.S. shale revolution, flooded global markets with oil. Crude oil prices collapsed from $107/barrel in June 2014 to $27 in January 2016 — a 75% crash in 19 months. Energy sector stocks dropped 40–60%. Countries dependent on oil revenue (Russia, Venezuela, Saudi Arabia) faced severe economic strain.
Key Facts
- Oil crashed 75% from $107 to $27/barrel in just 19 months
- OPEC refused to cut production, starting a market share war with U.S. shale
- Energy stocks (XLE) fell 50%; oil recovered to $60+ by 2018
Market Impact
Brent Crude Oil
-75.0%
Jun 2014–Jan 2016
Energy ETF (XLE)
-52.0%
Jun 2014–Jan 2016
S&P 500
-4.0%
2014–2016 (resilient)
XLE Performance - From Event Start
Monthly price change (%) from June 20, 2014. Extended 12 months beyond January 20, 2016 for recovery context.
💡 Run XLE from June 2014 to see the energy sector crash and recovery.
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What this means
- Single historical episodes are context, not forecasts. Market paths can differ meaningfully in future cycles.
- Returns shown around major events can be highly sensitive to entry and exit dates, so compare multiple windows.
- Risk management and diversification matter because large drawdowns and sharp rebounds often cluster together.
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What happened
OPEC's decision not to cut production in November 2014, combined with the U.S. shale revolution, flooded global markets with oil. Crude oil prices collapsed from $107/barrel in June 2014 to $27 in January 2016 — a 75% crash in 19 months. Energy sector stocks dropped 40–60%. Countries dependent on oil revenue (Russia, Venezuela, Saudi Arabia) faced severe economic strain.
Why it mattered
- Oil crashed 75% from $107 to $27/barrel in just 19 months
- OPEC refused to cut production, starting a market share war with U.S. shale
- Energy stocks (XLE) fell 50%; oil recovered to $60+ by 2018
Worked example
Historical hypothetical - for educational purposes only. Not investment advice.
Scenario
$10,000 in XLE at the start of Oil Crash 2014–16
Hypothetical outcome
Fell to ~$2,500 at the trough (-75%)
Key lesson
Investors who held through the trough - rather than selling at the bottom - participated in the subsequent recovery. Long-term holders of broad indices eventually saw full recovery and new highs.
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What happened during Oil Crash 2014–16?
OPEC's decision not to cut production in November 2014, combined with the U.S. shale revolution, flooded global markets with oil. Crude oil prices collapsed from $107/barrel in June 2014 to $27 in January 2016 — a 75% crash in 19 months. Energy sector stocks dropped 40–60%. Countries dependent on oil revenue (Russia, Venezuela, Saudi Arabia) faced severe economic strain.
How did Brent Crude Oil perform during this period?
Brent Crude Oil fell 75% during Jun 2014–Jan 2016. While painful for investors who sold, those who held through the decline often participated in the subsequent recovery.
What would $10,000 invested in XLE at Oil Crash 2014–16 be worth today?
Use our Investment Calculator with XLE starting 2014-06-20 to find the precise current value. Run XLE from June 2014 to see the energy sector crash and recovery. Historical performance does not guarantee future results.
How long did it take markets to recover from Oil Crash 2014–16?
Crude oil crashed 75% in 19 months. Energy stocks were devastated. Recovery timelines varied by asset class: broad indices like the S&P 500 eventually recovered to pre-crash levels, though the duration ranged from months (2020) to years (2008) or even decades (1929). Our timeline tool lets you run these exact recovery scenarios.
What investing lessons does Oil Crash 2014–16 teach?
Market crashes are a recurring feature of investing, not an anomaly. Oil Crash 2014–16 reinforces several key lessons: diversification reduces but doesn't eliminate crash risk; panic-selling at the bottom locks in losses; and historically, patient investors who held through or bought during crashes were rewarded over multi-year horizons. Use our calculator to run specific "what if I had bought / sold at this exact point" scenarios.
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All calculations are hypothetical and educational only. Data sources: official financial exchanges and public datasets. View full methodology →