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Home Business & Economy

Oil Prices Steady Despite U.S. Blockade

April 15, 2026
in Business & Economy
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Oil prices stayed mostly steady on Wednesday as traders weighed renewed U.S.-Iran talk prospects against ongoing disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, which remains largely closed amid conflict and a U.S. naval blockade.

Brent crude futures, the international benchmark, edged up 43 cents, or 0.5%, to $95.22 per barrel by 0821 GMT. That followed a sharp 4.6% drop in the previous session as hopes for de-escalation flickered.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude, meanwhile, slipped 17 cents, or 0.2%, to $91.11 a barrel after plunging nearly 8% the day before.

The volatility reflects a market still digesting the aftershocks of a short but intense chapter in Middle East tensions. Since late February 2026, when U.S. and Israeli strikes targeted Iran, shipping through the Strait of Hormuz—which normally carries about one-fifth of the world’s seaborne oil—has been severely curtailed.

Traffic now moves at only a fraction of the pre-war norm of more than 130 daily crossings, according to industry sources. The waterway’s effective closure has forced refiners worldwide, especially in Asia and Europe, to scramble for alternative supplies.

On Tuesday, President Donald Trump signaled that direct talks with Tehran aimed at ending the conflict could resume as early as this week, after weekend negotiations in Pakistan (mediated in part by Islamabad) broke down without agreement.

Yet the administration simultaneously tightened the screws: the U.S. Navy has enforced a blockade on shipping to and from Iranian ports, which military officials said on Wednesday has “completely halted” Iranian seaborne trade. A U.S. destroyer intercepted two oil tankers attempting to depart Iran on Tuesday, underscoring the policy’s bite.

“The trajectory of oil prices will likely hinge less on battlefield developments and more on diplomatic momentum,” said Priyanka Sachdeva, senior market analyst at Phillip Nova. “Markets are increasingly reacting to headlines around negotiations rather than troop deployments.

Each signal of renewed dialogue has been met with price declines, suggesting that traders are systematically unwinding the ‘war premium’ embedded into crude earlier this month.”

That premium had propelled prices well above $100 per barrel in recent sessions amid fears of prolonged disruption. Now, with a two-week ceasefire in place but transit through the Strait still uncertain, the market is pricing in cautious optimism for diplomacy—even as physical supply constraints persist.

Refiners are feeling the pinch acutely. Desperate for replacement barrels, they have bid up premiums for non-Gulf crude. A cargo of WTI Midland destined for Rotterdam changed hands Tuesday at a record $22.80 per barrel above European benchmark prices, highlighting the scramble for U.S. Gulf Coast and North Sea supplies.

Adding to the supply-side pressure, the U.S. has opted not to renew a 30-day waiver on sanctions covering Iranian oil at sea, set to expire this week, and quietly allowed a similar waiver on Russian oil to lapse over the weekend. Two administration officials confirmed the moves to Reuters, effectively removing another layer of potential relief for global inventories.

Analysts caution that reopening the Strait may not be straightforward even if a broader peace deal materializes. “The Strait of Hormuz is not Trump’s alone to reopen,” noted Ole Hvalbye, an analyst at SEB. “Iran has its own calculus, and the regime may find it strategically useful to keep flows restricted even after any peace deal—whether to extract reparations, guarantee security, or simply to inflict political pain ahead of the November U.S. midterm elections.”

Later Wednesday, attention shifts to fresh U.S. inventory data from the Energy Information Administration, scheduled for release at 10:30 a.m. ET (1430 GMT). A Reuters poll forecast a slight build in crude stockpiles last week, offset by draws in distillates and gasoline.

Market sources tracking preliminary American Petroleum Institute data reported that U.S. crude inventories rose for a third consecutive week, providing some buffer against Gulf disruptions.

For now, the oil market remains in a delicate balance: diplomatic signals pull prices lower, while the reality of constrained Middle East exports and tightening sanctions keeps a floor underneath.

Any breakthrough—or breakdown—in talks could swiftly reprice the “war premium” once more. As one trader put it, the next few days of headlines from Washington and Tehran may matter far more than barrels on the water.

WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW

Oil prices remained largely stable on Wednesday, around $95 for Brent and $91 for WTI, as diplomatic signals from renewed U.S.-Iran talks outweighed persistent physical supply risks.

The trajectory of prices now depends far more on diplomatic momentum and negotiation headlines than on battlefield developments or the partial closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

Every positive signal on talks triggers a swift unwinding of the recent “war premium,” even as the U.S. blockade, non-renewal of sanctions waivers, and restricted Gulf exports continue to constrain actual supply.

Tags: oil pricesStrait of HormuzU.S.-Iran talk
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