Brent futures extended losses on Wednesday following signals that stranded tankers are exiting the Persian Gulf, signaling a steady return of global oil supply after severe maritime disruptions.
The Brent futures contract fell more than 1% to $76.21 per barrel hovering near early-March levels. Murban futures closed at its lowest since Mid-February at $69.63/bbl on June 23 and were not trading by the time of publication of this oil price update.
"Brent crude slipped below $77 per barrel, leaving prices less than 10% above pre-war levels, as tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz continues to normalise," Saxo Bank analysts said.
Multiple oil tankers previously stranded in the region are preparing to navigate out of the critical Strait of Hormuz choke point.
ING analysts noted that because Saudi Arabia and the UAE deployed pipeline diversions during the conflict, the broader Persian Gulf supply will entirely recover to pre-war levels once transit volumes through the strait hit roughly 14 million barrels per day.
"We continue to believe that the oil sell-off is overdone, with the market still tightening," ING added.
On the geopolitical front, while Washington claimed Tehran agreed to permanent, indefinite nuclear inspections, Iranian officials promptly disputed making such structural concessions, exposing the ongoing fragility of the framework, Reuters reported on Tuesday.
The oil market now awaits US crude inventory data from the Energy Information Administration.