BENGALURU, June 24 — Brent crude prices fell three per cent on Wednesday to the lowest level since before the start of the Iran war on signs that more oil tankers are set to move out of the Strait of Hormuz.
Brent crude futures were down US$2.32, or 3.01 per cent, at US$74.76 a barrel by 1218 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate slipped by US$2.17, or 2.96 per cent, to US$71.04.
Brent touched a low of US$74.61, its weakest level since February 27, the day before the start of U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran. WTI fell as low as US$70.91, the weakest since March 3.
"While there are early encouraging signs of increased tanker activity, the market is pricing in the broader scenario of Iranian oil re-entering the global market and the Strait of Hormuz normalising.
"If sanctions are eased, Iranian production and exports could ramp up relatively quickly given the substantial amount stored on tankers — we are likely talking weeks rather than months," said KCM Trade chief market analyst Tim Waterer.
Adding to signs of market weakness, physical crude oil cargoes are selling at discounts across the globe, changing trade flows as markets come under pressure from fast-rising Middle Eastern supply with Iran set to boost sales following a temporary reprieve from United States (US) sanctions.
Oman said it would keep the Strait of Hormuz open to shipping without imposing any tolls and had designated two temporary routes north and south of the existing shipping lane to facilitate the safe passage of vessels departing the region.
Prices have also come under pressure this week from the 60-day sanctions waiver Washington granted Tehran after initial peace talks, allowing Iran to sell oil, and from an easing of hostilities in Lebanon.
On Wednesday, a spokesperson said that ships have already sailed through the Strait of Hormuz under a newly launched evacuation scheme by the United Nations' shipping agency.
Yet uncertainty remains over the durability of the US-Iran accord. On Tuesday, US President Donald Trump said that Iran had agreed to nuclear inspections into "infinity", though Tehran later claimed that it had made no such concession.
"Markets are currently assigning too much confidence to a favourable outcome without fully discounting the risks associated with unresolved nuclear issues and inspection disputes," said Siebert Financial chief information officer Mark Malek.
On Wednesday, J.P. Morgan lowered its second-half 2026 Brent crude oil price forecast due to lower-than-expected OECD commercial inventory draws and softer demand for oil.
The bank sees Brent averaging US$86 per barrel in the third quarter and US$80 in the last quarter.
Elsewhere, Moscow's oil refinery will be offline for at least six months after suffering extensive damage in Ukrainian drone attacks, according to two industry sources on Wednesday.







