Brent crude oil forecast as Iran delays response to US Hormuz proposal

Brent crude oil forecast as Iran delays response to US Hormuz proposal
Crispus Nyaga
May 10, 2026, 01:21 A.M.

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Brent crude (BZ=F)

Buy Brent if talks stall and Hormuz stays constrained. The article points to Iran delaying, inventories falling (~4.8m bpd), and storage risk around July 4—so supply tightness can keep prices elevated even without a deal. Catalyst: any lack of progress keeps the market pricing a longer disruption; technicals also suggest a potential inverted H&S path toward ~$115 if the right shoulder plays out.

Key Risk: A credible Iran–US deal that clearly reopens Hormuz quickly, reversing the supply-tightness narrative and pushing Brent below ~$96.

USOIL (WTI)

Sell WTI on deal optimism and talk headlines. The article says signs of a potential deal are bearish for oil, and WTI has already retreated along with Brent. If Hormuz reopening odds rise, WTI should react more sharply because it’s more sensitive to global risk-on/risk-off and near-term supply expectations; use rallies to fade until escalation signs appear.

Key Risk: Escalation or renewed Hormuz threat that lifts the whole complex and forces WTI back above the recent range, invalidating the “deal = bearish” setup.

  • Brent crude oil price dropped amid hopes of a deal between Iran and the US.
  • Iran has delayed its response to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Oil has formed an inverted head-and-shoulders pattern on the daily chart.

Brent crude oil price ended the week lower as investors anticipated an Iranian response to US proposals to end the ten-week war. It dropped to $100, down sharply from this month’s high of over $115 a barrel. Other global benchmarks like the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) and Russian urals have also retreated.

Iran is in no hurry to reach a deal

Brent crude oil price retreated after media reports suggested that a deal between Iran and the United States was imminent. Axios was the first major news organization to report this. In his report, Barack Ravid said that the two sides were working on a one-page document that would reopen the Strait of Hormuz.

The United States sent Iran a proposal on this deal late last week. In a press gaggle on Friday, Trump said that the US was waiting for Iranian’s proposal “tonight.” At press time, Iran was yet to submit the proposal, a sign that officials are not in a hurry.

Analysts believe that divisions between the US and Iran are extremely wide and hard to bridge. For one, the US will want Iran to hand it over the highly enriched uranium, which Trump will use to tout his success. Iran has largely ruled that out. 

On the other hand, Iran will want an end to sanctions and the release of billions of dollars held in foreign accounts. Such a move will be risky for Trump, who has accused President Obama of shipping billions of dollars to Iran after the signing of the Iran nuclear deal.

Therefore, there is still a risk that the ongoing crisis will continue for longer than Trump expects. Such a move would lead to higher crude oil prices for longer.

In addition to the closure of the Hormuz Strait, the reality is that oil inventories are falling in some key countries. Data shows that global oil inventories fell by about 4.8 million barrels a day between March and late April. 

Analysts believe that the oil supply shock will worsen even when the war ends because of the declining inventories. In a warning statement last week, Jeff Currie, a top analyst at Carlyle Group, said that US oil storage tanks may run empty around July 4th this year. 

Looking ahead, signs of a potential deal between the US and Iran will be bearish for oil prices. Signs of an escalation, on the other hand, will lead to a reversal. 

A key wildcard will be Donald Trump’s trip to China, where he will ask Beijing to press Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. While the closure is affecting Beijing, chances are that Xi will not be interested in helping the US.

Brent crude oil price is sending mixed signals

brent crude oil price

Crude oil price chart | Source: TradingView

The daily chart reveals that Brent has come under pressure in the past few days. It has pulled back from $116 earlier this month to the current $100. 

A closer look shows that it may have formed a double-top pattern whose neckline is at $85. However, one can also argue that it has formed an inverted head-and-shoulders pattern and is now in the right shoulder.

Therefore, this week will be crucial as traders wait for the outcome of the ongoing talks. The most likely scenario is where the inverted H&S pattern activates and retests the key resistance at $115. A drop below the support at $96 will invalidate the bearish outlook.