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13APR

Brent falls through Trump's war talk

3 min read
17:09UTC

Brent crude settled near $77.54 on 22 June, down about 8 per cent on the week and roughly 36 per cent below the conflict peak, after holding near $80.59 through the IRGC closure declaration.

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Key takeaway

Brent fell to about $77.54 on the days Trump's threats peaked, pricing the war premium out.

Brent Crude, the global oil benchmark, settled near $77.54 a barrel on 22 June, down about 8 per cent on the week and roughly 36 per cent below the conflict's peak 1. The price had held near $80.59 on 20 June through the IRGC's declaration that the Strait of Hormuz was closed , then fell as Trump's threats peaked. For households this means petrol and heating costs easing, not the spike a sealed strait would normally trigger.

A closure threat on the world's most important oil chokepoint usually drives prices up. This one drove them down. Through Trump's maximal rhetoric and the paper closure of Hormuz, traders treated the Switzerland roadmap and the resumed transits as the real signal and the closure declaration as theatre, and front-ran a return to normal supply.

The risk the market is not pricing is not a blockade but a stumble the 60-day timetable cannot absorb: a mining incident, a logistics failure, or a diplomatic breakdown that turns the declaration into something enforced. Until that happens, the benchmark is betting on normalisation, and every completed transit makes the bet look safer.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The price of Brent crude oil (the global benchmark most countries use to price their oil) fell to around $77.54 on 22 June, down from a peak of over $120 during the height of the conflict. This happened because traders could see that ships were still moving through the Gulf despite Iran saying it had closed the strait. When traders saw 55 ships move through on 21 June, they stopped paying the premium they had added to cover the risk of a real closure. CENTCOM's vessel count, not Iran's declaration, moved the price. The drop helps petrol prices, but it puts pressure on Gulf oil producers: Saudi Arabia's government budget requires roughly $87 oil to balance, and at $77.54 Riyadh is running a deficit on every barrel it exports.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Brent's 36% fall from the conflict peak reflects three sequential de-risking events that each removed a layer of the war premium: the Islamabad MOU signing (15 June) removed the open-conflict premium; CENTCOM's blockade wind-down (18 June) removed the naval-interdiction premium; the Switzerland roadmap and Oman-corridor transits (21-22 June) removed the IRGC-closure premium.

What remains embedded in the $77.54 price is the mine-clearance delay premium and the insurance-gap premium. London P&I clubs have not returned to Hormuz cover; the BIMCO CONWARTIME clause remains triggered; and the UAE state producer ADNOC assessed in June that stranded Hormuz barrels may not clear until 2027. These structural barriers prevent a full return to the pre-war $67 per barrel level regardless of diplomatic progress.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Saudi Arabia and Gulf producers face fiscal pressure at $77.54 Brent; Kuwait's unilateral production increase signals producers are prioritising revenue over price discipline, potentially undermining OPEC+ cohesion.

    Short term · Reported
  • Risk

    Any disruption to the Oman corridor (IRGC mining, vessel seizure, Omani political pressure) would reprice the geopolitical risk rapidly; the market has priced out the war premium before the underlying threat is fully resolved.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Opportunity

    Asian refiners with Gulf crude supply contracts face a structural cost reduction at sub-$80 Brent, improving margins and enabling renewed long-term contract negotiations at pre-war pricing.

    Medium term · Reported
First Reported In

Update #135 · Trump's threats peak, his paper stays blank

Wikipedia / Kpler· 22 Jun 2026
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