Oil futures tumbled to pre-war lows as traffic resumed through the Strait of Hormuz, easing the supply anxieties in a market struggling with fuel availability since the war started.
Front-month West Texas Intermediate crude futures tumbled nearly 1% to $69.84 per barrel, while Brent futures were down 0.8% to $73.18/bbl. Both contracts hit their lowest since late-February.
"Oil prices have continued to decline after it is reported that more tankers have been able to pass through the Strait of Hormuz and are thus back at the level just before the war in Iran broke out," SEB analysts noted.
Kpler reported that an average of 26 commodity ships now pass through the Strait of Hormuz daily. While this marks a significant recovery, traffic still lags far behind the pre-war average of 88 ships per day.
About 1,150 vessels, with an estimated vessel and cargo value of $125 billion and a total volume of 29 million gross tonnage, are currently stuck in the Persian Gulf, awaiting clearance to resume transit following the US-Iran deal, Allianz Commercial said on Wednesday.
Amid these developments, US President Donald Trump reportedly said that negotiations are progressing, while firmly warning that the US will not tolerate any transit fees imposed on vessels using the waterway.
Meanwhile, a joint coalition with US, Qatar, Nigeria, and Algeria has urged the European Union to freeze its impending methane regulations in an open letter on Wednesday, noting that nearly all EU oil imports and a significant portion of natural gas imports will fail compliance metrics by the January 2027 deadline.
On the supply side, US commercial crude oil inventories fell by 6.1 million barrels during the week ended June 19, the Energy Information Administration said on Wednesday.