Brent crude futures fell into a bearish contango structure for the first time since February, as the US-Iran peace agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz eased supply concerns, Bloomberg analysis showed on Wednesday.
The prompt time spread for Brent, the global benchmark, traded in shallow contango, with the nearest contract pricing below the following month. The market structure signals an expectation of oversupply, marking a sharp reversal in sentiment as physical market premiums continue to slide.
The benchmark earlier dropped below $75 per barrel, its lowest level since the onset of the Middle East conflict. The shift follows a surge in tanker traffic through the Hormuz, with Gulf oil exports now departing at the fastest pace since hostilities began.
The move in Brent futures mirrors a similar trend seen in the Dubai market in recent days, underscoring a broader softening across global oil benchmarks.
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