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European Oil Markets
3JUL

OFAC cuts the Iranian-oil waiver short

2 min read
10:26UTC

OFAC revoked General Licence X on 7 July and replaced it with a wind-down-only GL X1, cutting the legal window for Iranian oil more than five weeks short to 17 July.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

OFAC turned an open Iranian-oil licence into a wind-down deadline expiring 17 July, five weeks early.

OFAC (the US Office of Foreign Assets Control) revoked its Iranian-oil GL X (General Licence X) on Tuesday 7 July and issued GL X1, a wind-down-only authorisation that bars any new Iranian contracting and lapses entirely on 17 July 1. A general licence is the permission slip that lets firms deal in otherwise-sanctioned barrels; GL X, issued on 21 June, had authorised the production, delivery and sale of Iranian-origin crude, petrochemicals and products through 21 August. GL X1 cuts more than five weeks off that clock.

GL X was the instrument that had sent Brent to a three-month low near $73 in June, before EU Regulation 833/2014 (the bloc's Russian-oil import ban) kept European buyers away from the relief . The revocation runs the film backwards. It front-loads Iranian wind-down cargoes into Asia before the deadline, which firms the same crude spread the Hormuz strikes had already lifted.

OFAC moved on the same day the vessels were hit, not on an administrative calendar. A scheduled 21 August expiry does not get pulled forward five weeks on the afternoon three ships are struck. A dated supply cliff nine days out is a harder catalyst for the spread than a risk premium that can drain in a single session.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

OFAC (the US Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control) issues general licences, which are official permission slips that let companies do business that sanctions would otherwise ban. General License X let firms handle Iranian oil despite US sanctions on Iran. On 7 July, OFAC cancelled that permission slip early and issued a stricter one, General License X1, that only allows companies to unwind deals already in progress, not start new ones, and only until 17 July. After that date, handling Iranian oil through any US-connected bank, insurer or ship becomes illegal again.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

OFAC general licences are unilateral executive carve-outs issued under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, not treaty obligations, so Treasury can revoke or shorten one at any time it judges the underlying policy no longer serves US interests, without a notice period or legislative vote.

That discretionary structure is why GL X could be pulled five weeks before its scheduled 21 August expiry with no market warning, in contrast to the EU's Regulation 833/2014 architecture, which requires unanimous Council approval to change and therefore moves on a slower, more visible timetable.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    US-linked insurers and shipowners still handling Iranian cargoes have until 17 July to exit, a narrow window that could strand any vessel not already unloaded.

First Reported In

Update #15 · Three shocks, one week, across the oil spreads

OFAC· 10 Jul 2026
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This Event
OFAC cuts the Iranian-oil waiver short
A soft, drainable risk premium has become a hard, dated supply deadline that firms the crude spread independently of the war.
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