Oil prices steadied in Asian trading on Wednesday, recovering modestly after a two-percent drop in the previous session, as investors weighed conflicting signals from Middle East diplomacy and Washington.
Brent crude, the international benchmark, edged up 15 cents, a gain of 0.22 percent, to trade at $67.57 a barrel by mid-morning GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate rose a similarly tentative 12 cents, or 0.19 percent, to $62.45.
Both contracts remain pinned near two-week lows, a reflection of the unease gripping energy markets as traders struggle to reconcile cautious diplomatic optimism with a threat environment that grows more volatile by the day.
The immediate catalyst for Tuesday’s sell-off and Wednesday’s hesitant recovery was news out of Oman, where American and Iranian negotiators have been engaged in what officials are cautiously calling “constructive” talks over Tehran’s nuclear program.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi confirmed on Tuesday that the two sides had reached an understanding on broad “guiding principles,” a development that briefly rattled oil markets on fears that a potential agreement could eventually unlock Iranian crude exports currently strangled by U.S. sanctions.
But Araqchi was careful to temper expectations, stressing in remarks that a final deal was by no means imminent. For oil traders, that nuance matters enormously. A comprehensive nuclear agreement that brought Iranian barrels potentially one million or more per day back onto world markets could meaningfully depress prices already under pressure from a global demand outlook clouded by economic uncertainty.
“Crude oil prices look poised for a technical rebound,” said Sugandha Sachdeva, founder of SS WealthStreet, a New Delhi-based research firm, speaking to the cautious mood. “However, a finalized agreement remains distant, and markets remain cautious about the durability of diplomatic momentum.” In other words, Wednesday’s uptick may owe more to bargain hunting than to any genuine shift in the fundamental picture.
Whatever diplomatic goodwill has been generated at the negotiating table, it is being complicated by developments on the water. Iran and Russia are set to conduct joint naval drills in the Sea of Oman and the northern Indian Ocean on Thursday, a show of force that comes just days after Iran’s Revolutionary Guards staged military exercises in the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow chokepoint through which roughly a fifth of the world’s seaborne oil flows daily.
The timing is unlikely to be coincidental. Such exercises are widely understood as geopolitical signalling, and markets are reading them as such. Any disruption to Hormuz transit, even a temporary one, would send shockwaves through global energy supply chains, providing an instant and dramatic floor under prices.
Adding a further dimension of risk, the political consultancy Eurasia Group said in a note to clients on Tuesday that it places a 65 percent probability on U.S. military strikes against Iran before the end of April, a striking assessment that underlines just how precarious the current diplomatic moment truly is.
If the talks collapse and Washington resorts to military action, the geopolitical risk premium baked into oil prices could spike sharply, erasing the supply-side relief that a nuclear deal might otherwise have provided.
Closer to home, the market’s attention is turning to a pair of closely watched reports on the state of American oil stockpiles. The American Petroleum Institute is due to release its weekly figures later Wednesday, followed by the official numbers from the U.S. Energy Information Administration on Thursday.
U.S. crude inventories likely climbed by around 2.3 million barrels in the week ending February 13, a build that, if confirmed, would signal softer domestic demand or rising production, either of which would add downward pressure to prices.
Meanwhile, gasoline stocks are expected to have declined by approximately 200,000 barrels, while distillate inventories—encompassing diesel and heating oil—are forecast to have fallen by around 1.6 million barrels, suggesting that downstream demand remains reasonably firm even as crude accumulates upstream.
The geopolitical calculus is further complicated by events unfolding thousands of miles to the north. Negotiators from Ukraine and Russia wrapped up the first day of U.S.-brokered peace talks in Geneva on Tuesday, with President Donald Trump publicly urging Kyiv to move swiftly toward an agreement to end a conflict now in its fourth year.
A durable ceasefire in Ukraine could have significant implications for global energy markets, potentially easing the sanctions pressure on Russian energy exports that have distorted supply flows across Europe and Asia since 2022.
Sachdeva noted the potential impact plainly. “Any shift in that geopolitical axis could add a risk premium to prices,” she said—a reminder that, whether in the Persian Gulf or the plains of eastern Ukraine, the variables shaping global oil markets are multiplying, not diminishing.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Oil markets are treading carefully as U.S.-Iran nuclear talks offer a fragile glimmer of diplomatic progress, but make no mistake—a deal is far from done. With Iranian and Russian warships conducting joint drills near the Strait of Hormuz, Eurasia Group placing a 65% probability on U.S. military strikes against Iran by the end of April, and peace talks between Russia and Ukraine still in their infancy, the world’s most critical oil supply routes remain dangerously exposed.
Prices may have steadied for now, but the underlying tension between diplomatic hope and military reality means the energy market is one miscalculation away from a significant shock. Watch the Geneva talks, watch Hormuz, and watch Washington—because right now, geopolitics is the only thing that truly matters to the price of oil.























