Oil prices fell more than 1% on Thursday to their lowest since the Iran war began, driven by a US-Iran interim pact to halt the their conflict, which has now been signed ahead of its original schedule.
Front-month Murban crude futures fell 1.3% to $73.36 per barrel to their lowest since late February, while Brent futures were down 1.9% to $78.08/bbl and hovered near their lowest since March 2.
Bloomberg reported that the US and Iran signed an interim agreement to end the conflict in the Middle East and reopen the Strait of Hormuz on Wednesday.
The memorandum of understanding immediately waives US sanctions on Iranian oil exports and initiates a 60-day negotiation framework to formally settle broader nuclear issues, as per the report.
However, experts warn that reopening the Strait of Hormuz will not immediately restore normal cargo flows.
"Reopening the Strait of Hormuz and normalising trade flows are two very different things. Confidence around transiting the region remains fragile, freight continues to dominate discussions and insurance has yet to meaningfully improve," Kpler analysts said.
"On paper the waterway may be reopening, but that does not automatically mean business resumes as if nothing happened," Kpler analysts added.
A weekly domestic inventory report from the US Energy Information Administration noted that commercial crude stockpiles dropped by 8.3 million barrels to a total of 418.2 million barrels for the week ended June 12.
On the geopolitical front, a major Ukrainian drone attack on Russia including the capital Moscow, has caused a blaze at the Gazprom Neft-owned Kapotnya oil refinery which supplies fuel stations in the capital, according to media reports on Thursday.