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Oil falls as stranded tankers exit Hormuz, puncturing crude’s fear trade

Oil falls as stranded tankers exit Hormuz, puncturing crude’s fear trade
Devesh Kumar
24 June 2026, 16:14 PM

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WTI (NYMEX)

Buy WTI exposure (e.g., long front-month WTI futures or USO). The article shows the “war premium” draining: more tankers moving through Hormuz, safety assurances enabling phased departures, and UAE exports near 85% of pre-war levels. That combination keeps crude capped around the low-$70s and favors a grind lower in risk pricing rather than a renewed spike.

Key Risk: Talks break down and Hormuz traffic tightens again, forcing a fast return of the supply-shock premium.

Brent (ICE)

Sell Brent vs WTI (e.g., short Brent front-month futures or buy WTI/short Brent spread). The piece highlights improving Gulf logistics and a 60-day US waiver that increases the chance of more barrels reaching Asia—typically more supportive for WTI-linked flows than Brent-linked pricing. With both under pressure, the spread should stay pressured if the market keeps treating reopening as incomplete but improving.

Key Risk: A renewed Middle East escalation hits Europe-linked flows harder than US-linked pricing, widening Brent’s discount/forcing a spread reversal.

  • WTI crude stays weak as Hormuz tanker traffic improves after talks.
  • Oil traders cut war premium, yet Gulf shipping risks still linger today.
  • US waiver on Iran oil adds pressure as crude nears four-month low.

Oil’s war premium is being drained by diplomacy, but not by certainty.

Crude prices stayed under pressure on Wednesday as more tankers began moving through the Strait of Hormuz and traders recalibrated the risk of a prolonged Gulf supply shock.

West Texas Intermediate traded near $72.50 a barrel in Asian hours after touching $71.94, its weakest level in about three months.

Brent also held near four-month lows, extending a sharp pullback that has followed progress in US-Iran talks and signs that commercial shipping is slowly returning to the world’s most important oil chokepoint.

Hormuz flows reset the oil trade

The immediate pressure on crude came from improving traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow route that carries a large share of seaborne oil and gas exports from the Gulf.

The International Maritime Organization has secured safety assurances to help hundreds of stranded vessels and thousands of seafarers leave the region in phases.

Alternative temporary routes are being used because the normal traffic separation system remains unsafe after months of disruption.

That has encouraged traders to strip out some of the fear premium built into crude during the conflict.

Still, flows remain below normal and the market is not yet treating the reopening as complete.

Supply routes adapt faster than expected

The supply picture has also eased because producers and buyers have become better at working around the disruption.

The International Energy Agency has reported that UAE oil exports recovered to nearly 85% of pre-war levels by early June, helped by pipelines, storage hubs and alternative shipping corridors.

A fresh 60-day US waiver allowing transactions involving Iranian crude and refined products has added to the bearish tone.

It raises the prospect of more barrels reaching Asian buyers at a time when traders are already questioning whether the recent risk premium can be sustained.

The effect is straightforward: every sign of smoother Gulf logistics reduces the urgency to hold crude as a hedge against a supply shock.

Diplomacy lowers risk, not uncertainty

The market’s problem is that the politics remain unsettled.

Oman and Iran are pushing ahead with talks on managing navigation through Hormuz, while Washington and Tehran continue to give different accounts of what has been agreed under the broader peace process.

President Donald Trump has said Iran accepted renewed international nuclear inspections.

Iranian officials have pushed back, saying detailed nuclear negotiations have not yet begun.

That gap matters for oil. If the talks hold, crude may remain under pressure as tanker traffic improves and Iranian supply becomes easier to trade.

If the deal frays, Hormuz risk could return quickly. For now, oil is pricing a better shipping backdrop, not a lasting peace.