Oil prices clawed back ground on Friday, staging a modest recovery after one of the most volatile weeks of trading this year, as fresh geopolitical shockwaves rippled through energy markets from the bombed shores of Oman to the diplomatic corridors of Washington.
Brent crude futures edged up 33 cents, or 0.35%, to $95.36 a barrel in early Asian trading, pulling back from a punishing 2.84% decline in the previous session. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude similarly steadied at $93.06 a barrel, recovering a nominal two cents after shedding more than 3% on Thursday.
Despite the turbulence, both benchmark contracts are on course to post their first weekly gain in three weeks, with WTI leading the charge with a rally of more than 6% on the week, a striking turnaround that underscores just how tightly global oil markets remain hostage to events in the Middle East.
The morning’s most jarring development came from the Gulf of Oman, where authorities confirmed that Oman’s Mina al Fahal oil terminal, one of the region’s critical export arteries, had suspended all loading operations following an explosion near its single-buoy mooring (SBM) berths.
The blast, believed to be the result of a drone attack, forced an immediate halt to oil shipments from the facility, sending fresh tremors through an already skittish market.
The incident was a stark reminder that the conflict’s reach extends well beyond the battlefields of Lebanon and Gaza. Infrastructure attacks on oil terminals represent a direct and immediate threat to global supply chains, and traders wasted little time pricing in the risk.
For market participants who had spent the past 24 hours unwinding bullish positions, the Oman explosion offered a sobering reason to reconsider.
Compounding the uncertainty was a significant diplomatic setback. Hezbollah’s Secretary-General Naim Qassem flatly rejected a U.S.-brokered ceasefire agreement between Israel and the Lebanese government on Thursday, calling into question weeks of behind-the-scenes negotiation by American envoys. The announcement gutted what little optimism had briefly flickered in the markets earlier in the week.
Iran, widely seen as Hezbollah’s principal backer and arms supplier, had already drawn its own red line, making a ceasefire in Lebanon an explicit precondition for any broader peace agreement with Washington.
That linkage has effectively transformed the Lebanon front into a bargaining chip in the far larger and more consequential U.S.-Iran nuclear and geopolitical standoff, deepening the complexity of any potential resolution.
U.S. President Donald Trump, maintaining his characteristic blend of assertion and optimism, told reporters Thursday that he believed progress was being made. “Lebanon deserves to have peace,” he said, though his remarks did little to move the needle in a market that has grown increasingly skeptical of near-term diplomatic breakthroughs.
Tony Sycamore, market analyst at IG, captured the collective market mood with characteristic precision. “Any optimism remains heavily clouded by a tangled web of headlines and counter-headlines,” he wrote in a note to clients Friday morning, a phrase that could well serve as the defining epitaph for this week’s trading.
At the heart of the energy market’s anxiety lies the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil supply passes each day. With traffic through the strait remaining severely limited amid the broader U.S.-Iran standoff, the potential for a full-scale supply disruption has loomed over every barrel traded this week.
Iranian oil exports have already fallen to their lowest level in six years, battered by the U.S. naval blockade that has effectively choked off Tehran’s primary revenue stream.
Shipping data confirms the steep decline, though analysts note that weak demand from China, long the world’s most voracious consumer of Iranian crude, has partially dampened what might otherwise have been a sharper price spike.
From a technical standpoint, Sycamore sees the risk tilted firmly to the upside. “As long as WTI crude remains above trendline support in the low $80s, the risks remain skewed higher,” he wrote, a view that will offer cold comfort to central bankers and policymakers already wrestling with inflationary pressures globally.
Against this turbulent backdrop, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) has sought to project calm. Secretary General Haitham Al Ghais confirmed Thursday that the cartel is maintaining its oil demand growth forecast of 1.2 million barrels per day for 2025, declining to revise its outlook despite the Middle East conflict and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a posture that signals confidence in the medium-term demand picture, even as near-term volatility rages.
Yet analysts are sounding the alarm on a structural issue that could amplify any supply shock: global oil inventories are falling, and falling fast. Several market watchers have flagged the prospect of a significant inventory drawdown heading into the third quarter, which could create the conditions for a sharp price spike precisely when geopolitical tensions may still be running hot.
What is unfolding in oil markets this week is not merely a story about barrels and benchmarks. It is a story about the fragility of the global energy architecture when conflict intersects with critical infrastructure and hardened diplomatic fault lines.
The failure of the Lebanon ceasefire, the attack on Oman’s export terminal, the stranglehold on the Strait of Hormuz, and the slow bleed of Iranian supply have collectively constructed a pressure cooker that the market is only beginning to fully price in.
With WTI holding above key technical support and Brent consolidating near the $95 level, the path of least resistance appears to be higher at least until diplomacy finds a foothold that, for now, remains stubbornly out of reach.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The Middle East conflict is tightening its grip on global oil markets, and the situation is deteriorating on multiple fronts.
A U.S.-brokered Lebanon ceasefire has collapsed after Hezbollah’s outright rejection, a suspected drone strike has knocked out a key Omani oil terminal, and the Strait of Hormuz, the world’s single most critical oil chokepoint, remains severely restricted.
With Iranian exports at a six-year low, global inventories shrinking, and diplomacy at a standstill, oil prices are not just reacting to today’s headlines; they are bracing for what comes next.
























