Oil prices fell further on Tuesday as early signs emerged that crude flows through the Strait of Hormuz were stabilizing, following a fragile diplomatic breakthrough between the U.S. and Iran.
Brent crude futures dropped $1.09, or 1.4%, to $76.81 a barrel in early morning trade, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) shed 87 cents, or 1.2%, to $72.99 a barrel as of 06:07 GMT.
The declines came on the heels of a punishing Monday session that saw prices crater by more than 3%, the steepest single-day drop in recent weeks, after the United States announced it had granted Iran a 60-day sanctions waiver following initial peace talks.
Reports of a lull in hostilities in Lebanon, part of a broader regional accord, added further downward pressure.
At the heart of the market’s movements lies the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway connecting the Persian Gulf to the wider world, through which roughly a fifth of all global oil supply flows.
Tehran’s declaration that the strategic passage was closed sent shockwaves through energy markets just days ago, with U.S. President Donald Trump threatening to restart hostilities if Iran followed through on disrupting shipping traffic.
The mood shifted measurably on Monday, however, when ship-tracking data confirmed that two crude tankers carrying just under 2 million barrels of oil had successfully transited the strait, an early but significant signal that traffic was recovering after weaker flows on Sunday, when fears over safe passage had kept tankers at bay.
“Transits over recent days look to have risen sharply,” wrote Neil Crosby, head of research at Sparta Commodities, in a note to clients. He added that the market would likely interpret rising transit numbers as a proxy not just for physical oil supply but for broader diplomatic progress.
“It feels like we will be stuck in this bearish risk-off/optimistic mood until something changes,” he cautioned, a sentiment that captured the tense, watch-and-wait atmosphere gripping trading floors from London to Singapore.
The relative calm of Tuesday morning belied what had been, just 48 hours earlier, a deeply unsettled weekend that threatened to derail the week-old accord entirely.
The agreement, forged through back-channel diplomacy and widely hailed as a fragile first step toward de-escalation, was thrown into doubt by a fresh round of bellicose statements, most notably Trump’s public warning that any Iranian interference with Hormuz shipping would be met with a resumption of military action.
That the talks survived the weekend turbulence at all was seen by some analysts as evidence of underlying political will on both sides to pull back from the brink. But the scars of that volatility remain fresh, and the market has not forgotten them.
The directional shift toward de-escalation is broadly positive for global economic stability. Still, energy analysts are warning against reading too much into the price declines as a sign of lasting normalization.
“There remains a prevailing dose of market skepticism, rooted in deep-seated mistrust between Washington and Tehran,” said Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade. “Any return to pre-war oil prices is likely to be delayed rather than immediate.”
His words echoed a broader unease among traders who have watched U.S.-Iran relations deteriorate and recover in cycles for decades and who know all too well how quickly today’s diplomatic handshake can become tomorrow’s crisis.
ING analysts struck a similarly measured tone, noting in a client note that “the gradual increase in oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz continues to weigh on the market” a phrase that captures the paradox energy traders now face: good news for the world is, at least in the short term, bearish news for oil prices.
Government data released Monday revealed that U.S. crude stocks held in the SPR fell to just 331.2 million barrels last week, the lowest level recorded since June 1983, more than four decades ago. The drawdown reflects the supply squeeze that accompanied the U.S.-Iran conflict and raises pointed questions about Washington’s buffer capacity should hostilities flare again.
That figure is unlikely to go unnoticed in Congress or at the White House and could factor heavily into how aggressively the administration pursues a durable rather than temporary resolution with Tehran.
Separately, analysts surveyed in a Reuters poll expect last week’s U.S. crude inventories to have fallen, alongside distillate and gasoline stockpiles, a development that, under normal circumstances, would lend support to prices.
For now, however, those fundamental supply signals are being overshadowed by the geopolitical narrative dominating the market.
Whether Tuesday’s losses mark the beginning of a sustained slide toward pre-conflict price levels or merely a pause before the next round of volatility may depend on factors entirely outside the control of energy markets.
The discipline of negotiators in both capitals, the behavior of tanker operators threading the needle through the Strait of Hormuz, and the unpredictable temperament of a U.S. president who has already shown he is willing to use military force as a market-moving lever.
For now, the oil market is doing what it does in times of deep uncertainty, pricing in possibility, hedging against catastrophe, and waiting.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Oil prices are falling as U.S.-Iran peace talks show early progress, with tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz gradually resuming. However, don’t mistake the dip in prices for lasting stability. Deep mistrust between Washington and Tehran means this fragile détente could unravel quickly.
The more alarming underlying story is that America’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve has hit its lowest level since 1983, leaving the U.S. with dangerously thin buffers if conflict reignites.























