Oil prices edged lower on Monday, pulling back from Friday’s modest gains as a fresh round of OPEC+ output hikes and a tentative recovery in Gulf exports through the Strait of Hormuz raised the prospect of more barrels reaching a market that has spent weeks trading nervously in the shadow of Middle East tensions.
By 0408 GMT, Brent crude had shed 34 cents, or 0.47%, to trade at $71.78 a barrel, giving back Friday’s 0.45% advance. Across the Atlantic, U.S. West Texas Intermediate slipped 20 cents, or 0.29%, to $68.49, though Monday’s move technically compared against Thursday’s close, since American markets sat out Friday’s session in observance of the July 4 holiday weekend.
The retreat capped a week in which both benchmarks moved little, a pause following a multi-week slide as traders weighed two competing narratives: the fragile diplomacy between Washington and Tehran over the future of shipping lanes through the Strait of Hormuz and the steady, if uneven, return of Gulf oil flows disrupted by the recent conflict.
“Coming off the U.S. long weekend, traders are sitting tight and waiting to see whether U.S.-Iran relations will be cordial or volatile this week,” said Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade, capturing a market that appears more inclined to wait than to wager.
The latest catalyst came from Vienna over the weekend, where OPEC and its allies, the expanded group known as OPEC+, which includes Russia agreed on Sunday to raise collective output targets by a further 188,000 barrels per day starting in August.
The move extends a pattern of incremental increases that began in June and continued through July, signaling the group’s intent to gradually restore supply even as geopolitical risk lingers over the region.
Yet analysts were quick to note that the headline figure may carry less weight than it appears to at first glance. “The number was largely in line with expectation,” said Tony Sycamore, market analyst at IG, before adding a note of caution: “With the UAE leaving and when quotas are probably still not being met due to production still ramping up after the conflict, I’m not sure they mean much at the moment.”
Sycamore’s skepticism points to two structural complications. First, the United Arab Emirates, once one of OPEC’s more assertive members on production capacity, formally exited the cartel as of May 1, removing a significant swath of barrels from the group’s collective accounting and raising questions about how meaningful its output targets remain without full membership alignment.
Second, and more pressing, is the reality that the war between the U.S., Israel, and Iran effectively rendered recent quota increases theoretical rather than operational.
The conflict shut the Strait of Hormuz to tanker traffic for a stretch, choking off exports from some of the Gulf’s most important producers, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Iraq among them, and capping their ability to pump anywhere near their allotted targets, regardless of what OPEC+ agreed on paper.
The more consequential story for traders this week may not be the OPEC+ decision itself, but the pace at which Gulf supply is actually recovering on the water. Producers in the region have begun reviving the volumes shut in during the conflict, and the numbers suggest that rebound is gathering momentum.
OPEC’s overall output jumped by 3.3 million barrels per day in June compared with May, reaching 19.43 million bpd, a sharp month-on-month swing that underscores how deep the wartime disruption had been.
Gulf oil exports told a similar story, climbing by more than 3 million barrels per day from May to June to top the 10 million bpd mark. Still, that figure remains roughly 40% below pre-war levels, a reminder that the region’s export infrastructure and shipping confidence have not fully healed even as the numbers move in the right direction.
Adding a further layer of supply to an already shifting picture, oil shipments from Russia’s western ports hit a record high in June, according to industry sources, with volumes expected to hold at that elevated level through July.
The increase, somewhat counterintuitively, stems from wartime damage of a different kind: Ukrainian drone strikes have knocked out portions of Russia’s domestic refining capacity, leaving Moscow with crude it can no longer process at home.
The result has been a redirection of that unrefined oil toward export markets, adding barrels to global supply even as sanctions and shipping constraints continue to complicate the flow of Russian crude.
Taken together, the OPEC+ increase, the Gulf export recovery, and record Russian shipments have combined to nudge prices lower, even as the underlying diplomatic situation between Washington and Tehran remains unresolved.
For now, the market’s attention appears fixed less on cartel arithmetic and more on whether this week’s U.S.-Iran engagement brings de-escalation or a fresh flashpoint that could once again put the Strait of Hormuz and the barrels that flow through it back in jeopardy.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Oil prices dipped Monday as OPEC+ added supply and Gulf exports rebounded, but the real story isn’t the barrel count; it’s the fragility behind it. Gulf exports are still 40% below pre-war levels, OPEC+’s new quotas are largely theoretical until Hormuz shipping fully normalizes, and Russia’s export surge is a byproduct of war damage, not stable growth.
Today’s lower prices reflect a market betting on de-escalation, not a market that has actually resolved its supply risk. All eyes remain on U.S.-Iran talks this week a breakdown there could reverse this move fast.














