Global oil markets pushed higher on Friday as geopolitical tensions surrounding the Iran conflict showed no signs of easing, with diplomatic efforts stalled and military threats escalating on multiple fronts.
Oil prices climbed for a fifth consecutive session on Friday, buoyed by an intractable standoff in one of the world’s most strategically vital waterways.
Brent crude futures for July delivery gained 89 cents, or 0.8%, to trade at $111.29 a barrel by 0808 GMT, while West Texas Intermediate futures edged up 37 cents, or 0.4%, to $105.44 a barrel.
The week’s performance has been nothing short of extraordinary for energy markets. Brent was on track for a weekly gain of 5.7%, while WTI surged an eye-watering 11.7% over the same period, a dramatic reflection of just how deeply the Iran crisis has unsettled global supply chains.
In a particularly alarming signal to traders, Brent’s June contract struck $126.41 a barrel before its Thursday expiry, a level not seen since March 2022 and one that sent shockwaves through commodity desks from London to Singapore.
The roots of the current turmoil stretch back to late February, when a joint U.S.-Israeli military operation against Iran triggered a cascade of consequences that have since reshaped global energy flows.
In retaliation, Tehran moved swiftly to close the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow but indispensable chokepoint through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas supply passes daily. The U.S. Navy, in turn, has moved to blockade exports of Iranian crude, effectively clamping down on both ends of one of the most consequential maritime corridors on the planet.
The dual blockades have left shipping companies, energy importers, and governments scrambling. Asian economies heavily reliant on Gulf crude, including China, Japan, South Korea, and India, have been forced to seek alternative supplies at premium prices, contributing to the relentless upward pressure on benchmarks.
A ceasefire brokered on April 8 has technically held, offering a fragile thread of hope in an otherwise bleak diplomatic landscape. Yet the agreement has done little to resolve the underlying standoff, and analysts warn that the situation remains a powder keg.
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei poured cold water on expectations of a swift resolution Thursday, telling the official IRNA news agency that quick results from ongoing U.S. talks were simply unrealistic.
“Expecting to reach a result in a short time, regardless of who the mediator is, in my opinion, is not very realistic,” Baghaei was quoted as saying, remarks that were parsed closely by markets and diplomats alike as a signal that Tehran is in no hurry to concede ground.
The comments came just hours after a senior official of Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guards issued an ominous warning, threatening “long and painful strikes” on U.S. positions should Washington renew military operations against Iran. The threat briefly drove oil prices to intraday peaks before markets pulled back, a pattern that has become grimly familiar over recent weeks.
Behind the scenes in Washington, the clock may be ticking on diplomacy. U.S. President Donald Trump was briefed Thursday on a series of proposed fresh military strikes against Iran, designed to compel Tehran to return to the negotiating table and agree to terms that would end the conflict.
The nature and scope of those plans remain classified, but their existence signals that the White House is growing impatient with the pace of talks and is actively weighing a more forceful approach.
Such a move would carry enormous consequences, not just militarily, but for an already battered global economy. Analysts at several major investment banks have quietly begun stress-testing scenarios in which Brent crude breaches $140 a barrel should hostilities resume in earnest.
Regional powers are also stepping up the pressure. UAE presidential adviser Anwar Gargash used a pointed post on X on Friday to make clear that Abu Dhabi no longer considers Iranian assurances regarding freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz credible.
“No unilateral Iranian arrangements can be trusted or relied upon,” Gargash wrote, referring to Tehran’s actions as “treacherous aggression” against its neighbors—some of the sharpest language yet from a Gulf state that has historically preferred quiet diplomacy over public confrontation.
The UAE, along with Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Cooperation Council members, has watched the crisis unfold with mounting alarm, acutely aware that any further escalation could destabilize the very sea lanes on which their own export revenues depend.
With diplomatic channels gridlocked, military options back on the table, and regional tensions running high, energy traders are bracing for what could be another turbulent week. The fundamental arithmetic remains stark: a fifth of global oil and LNG supply is effectively held hostage to a geopolitical dispute that shows no sign of resolution.
“The market is pricing in a prolonged disruption,” one London-based commodity strategist said Friday. “Until there is a credible, verifiable pathway to reopening the Strait, there is simply no ceiling anyone can point to with confidence.”
For consumers already grappling with elevated energy costs, that uncertainty offers little comfort, and for governments from Washington to Beijing, the pressure to find a diplomatic off-ramp is intensifying by the day.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The Iran conflict is delivering a full-blown energy crisis to the world’s doorstep. With the Strait of Hormuz, the jugular vein of global oil supply still choked off, prices are surging to levels not seen in years, and everyday consumers worldwide are paying the price.
Diplomacy is stalling, military escalation is back on the table, and neither side is blinking. Until there is a credible, verified agreement that reopens that critical waterway, oil markets will remain volatile and vulnerable to sudden shocks. The world is one miscalculation away from an energy catastrophe.



















