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Home Business & Economy

Oil Markets Stabilize After Sharp Decline

February 6, 2026
in Business & Economy
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Oil
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Global oil prices mounted a modest recovery on Friday following Thursday’s precipitous slide. However, the rebound did little to offset what traders expect to be the commodity’s first weekly decline in nearly eight weeks, as easing supply disruption fears collided with mounting anxiety over high-stakes diplomatic negotiations between Washington and Tehran.

By mid-morning in London, Brent crude futures—the international benchmark—had climbed 78 cents to $68.33 per barrel, a gain of 1.2%. Meanwhile, West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. standard, rose 80 cents to $64.09, up 1.3%. Despite Friday’s uptick, both benchmarks remained on track for significant weekly losses, with Brent poised to shed 3.3% over the five days and WTI facing a 1.8% decline.

The weekly retreat marks a notable reversal for energy markets, which had rallied in recent weeks on geopolitical tensions. Brent has now fallen 4.8% from its late-January peak, while WTI has declined 3.4% from last month’s near six-month high levels reached after President Donald Trump issued threats to launch military strikes against Iranian targets.

At the heart of market uncertainty lies a fundamental disagreement over the scope of U.S.-Iran negotiations scheduled for later Friday in Oman. The diplomatic divide has left investors in a state of nervous anticipation, unable to price in either escalation or détente with confidence.

Iranian officials have reportedly insisted the talks remain narrowly focused on nuclear program restrictions, the central issue of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action that the Trump administration abandoned during his first term. Washington, however, is pressing for a broader dialogue encompassing Tehran’s ballistic missile development and its financial and military support for proxy forces across the Middle East—from Hezbollah in Lebanon to the Houthis in Yemen.

“The two sides remain well apart, leaving tensions elevated,” Daniel Hynes, an analyst at ANZ Bank, wrote in a research note to clients. “This should see the geopolitical risk premium remain in place.”

That premium—the additional price traders pay for oil due to fears of supply disruptions—has become a significant component of current pricing. Any military confrontation between the United States and Iran could threaten one of the world’s most critical energy chokepoints: the Strait of Hormuz.

Approximately one-fifth of global oil consumption transits through the narrow waterway separating Oman and Iran—a 21-mile-wide passage at its narrowest point through which some 21 million barrels per day flow under normal circumstances. Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, and Iraq rely on the strait for the vast majority of their crude exports, as does Iran itself, a fellow OPEC member.

Any mining, blockade, or military action in these waters would send shockwaves through global energy markets, potentially triggering supply shortages and price spikes reminiscent of previous Gulf crises. This vulnerability explains why geopolitical tensions in the region consistently translate into higher oil prices, even when actual supply remains uninterrupted.

Should Friday’s talks yield progress toward reducing tensions, analysts warn that oil prices may face further downward pressure as market attention shifts back to underlying supply-and-demand fundamentals, which paint a considerably less bullish picture.

“We think that geopolitical fears will give way to weak fundamentals,” analysts at Capital Economics wrote, highlighting the recent recovery in Kazakhstan’s oil production following earlier disruptions. The London-based research firm projects these fundamental weaknesses could push prices toward $50 per barrel by the end of 2026—a decline of roughly 25% from current levels.

Such a trajectory would reflect not only restored supply from Kazakhstan and other producers but also concerns about global demand growth, particularly from China, whose post-pandemic economic recovery has disappointed expectations. Additionally, increased U.S. shale production continues to add supply to global markets, while OPEC+ producer group members have struggled to maintain production discipline.

Friday’s price action—a modest recovery following Thursday’s steep decline—illustrates the tug-of-war currently gripping energy markets. Traders are attempting to balance immediate geopolitical risks against longer-term supply abundance, all while parsing diplomatic signals from Muscat for clues about the direction of U.S.-Iran relations.

The coming hours could prove decisive. A breakdown in talks or inflammatory rhetoric from either side could send prices climbing once again. Conversely, any indication of progress—even preliminary agreements to continue discussions—might accelerate the retreat from recent highs as the geopolitical risk premium evaporates.

For now, oil markets remain suspended between two competing narratives: the ever-present threat of Middle Eastern conflict and the persistent reality of well-supplied global crude markets. How Friday’s diplomatic efforts unfold in Oman may determine which narrative dominates in the weeks ahead.

WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW

Oil prices are caught in a precarious balance. While markets recovered slightly on Friday, they’re heading for their first weekly loss in two months—not because of supply problems, but because geopolitical fears are starting to fade.

U.S.-Iran talks in Oman hold the key. If negotiations ease tensions, expect prices to fall further—potentially toward $50 per barrel by late 2026—as weak fundamentals and ample global supply reassert themselves. But if talks collapse, the threat to the Strait of Hormuz—through which 20% of the world’s oil flows—could send prices surging again.

Tags: Iranoiloil pricesSupply DisruptionU.S.
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