Oil futures collapsed over 4% on Wednesday, with Brent prices rebounding to pre-war levels as the US-Iran peace deal continues to weigh on prices while supply recovers through the Strait of Hormuz.
Front-month West Texas Intermediate crude futures dropped by 4.2% to $70.11 per barrel, their lowest since early March, while Brent futures slumped 4.3% to $73.78/bbl and hit their lowest since Feb. 27.
"If ceasefire talks hold, Hormuz flows normalise and shut-in barrels return, crude can stay under pressure," said Abhishek Kumar, Senior Oil Market Analyst at Sparta Commodities.
"Brent looks headline-driven for now, with a soft bias if implementation goes smoothly, but clear upside risk if there is any delay, tanker incident, insurance issue, toll dispute or renewed regional escalation," Kumar added.
Multiple oil tankers previously stranded in the region are preparing to navigate out of the critical Strait of Hormuz choke point as the market braces for a supply spike.
Physical crude oil prices are plummeting globally as surging Middle Eastern supply, boosted by a temporary reprieve from US sanctions on Iran, floods the market, Reuters reported on Wednesday.
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.
Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump said on Truth Social that he has formally directed the Department of Justice to launch an immediate investigation into major oil companies, alleging they engaged in corporate price gouging at the pump.