Wrong on both counts.
I forgot to add:
(1) that the buying and selling physical oil is not an option for most investors, but liquid markets that track oil prices can be found via futures, options, ETFs, or oil company stocks (see, e.g., A Beginner's Guide to Investing in Oil Markets - Investopedia, https://www.investopedia.com/article...il-markets.asp). Most oil is bought through options contracts, which give the buyer or seller the option to trade oil on a future date. If they choose to buy futures or options directly in oil, they need to trade them on a commodities exchange, not a stock market.
(2) that the Turkish news agency Ankara reported that " US energy agency revises oil price forecast up for 2022. International benchmark Brent crude now estimated to average $107.37 per barrel in 2022 and $97.24 per barrel in 2023," Sibel Morrow, 08.06.2022, https://www.aa.com.tr/en/americas/us...r-2022/2608854). $107.27 per barrel for Brent crude for the rest of 2022 is a far cry from the figure in your posting, for which you do not give a source.