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Oil prices rebound after sharp drop on Hormuz traffic signals

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  • Brent crude swung from a seven-week low Tuesday to a sharp rebound Wednesday as traders weighed US Energy Secretary Chris Wright’s comments on rising Hormuz traffic.thenationalnews
  • The EIA reported US crude inventories fell for a seventh straight week and warned OECD stockpiles are headed toward their lowest levels since 2003.tradingeconomics
  • Rystad Energy has warned a full re-escalation of the US-Iran conflict could drive Brent to $180 per barrel by August, per CNBC.oilprice

Oil Prices Volatile as US-Iran Conflict and Strait of Hormuz Disruption Roil Energy Markets

Oil prices swung sharply this week as the more than three-month-old US-Iran war continued to disrupt flows through the Strait of Hormuz, even as US officials signaled cautious optimism about a gradual reopening of the critical waterway.

Prices Whipsaw on Mixed Signals

Brent crude fell to around $91.45 per barrel on Tuesday after US Energy Secretary Chris Wright said ship traffic through the Strait of Hormuz is “rising very meaningfully,” a remark that knocked prices down roughly 3 percent to a seven-week low. West Texas Intermediate settled at $88.20 on the same session. By Wednesday, however, both benchmarks had bounced back, with Brent trading near $95 and WTI around $92 as traders weighed whether the easing would prove durable.yahoo

The volatility comes against a backdrop of tightening US supplies. The Energy Information Administration reported that US crude inventories fell by 7.2 million barrels in the week ending June 5, the seventh consecutive weekly decline. The EIA also warned that oil stockpiles across OECD nations are headed toward their lowest levels since at least 2003 and are unlikely to normalize before early 2027.tradingeconomics

Strait of Hormuz Remains a Flashpoint

The Strait of Hormuz, which normally handles roughly one-fifth of global oil and gas shipments, has been largely blocked since US and Israeli forces launched strikes on Iran on February 28. While a temporary ceasefire took hold in April, exchanges of fire resumed in early June after the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps attempted to stop tankers from crossing under US military escort.britannica

Wright, speaking at an Atlantic Council event on Tuesday, acknowledged it would take “many months” to restore normal flows of energy and critical materials even once lasting peace is reached. The Institute for the Study of War cautioned that Iran continues to demand US concessions before any substantive negotiations over reopening the strait.understandingwar

Analysts Warn of Prolonged Disruption

ING revised its oil forecasts higher in late April, assuming flows through the strait will remain below pre-war levels through the end of 2026. Rystad Energy warned in late May that a full re-escalation could push Brent to $180 per barrel by August, though its base case assumes a gradual de-escalation.rystadenergy

The Brookings Institution noted that as of early June, ship traffic through the strait remains at a “near-standstill,” with only a small number of vessels passing after paying tolls to the IRGC. Whether Wright’s assessment of improving traffic translates into sustained relief for global energy markets remains to be seen.brookings

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