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Iran Conflict 2026
11JUN

Iran's rial rises for a war-first time

4 min read
09:17UTC

Iran's currency firmed 1.7 per cent over three days on Rubio's sequencing signal, its first gain since the fighting began, though a six-month 43 per cent slide still stands.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The rial firmed 1.7 per cent on Rubio's testimony, but a 43 per cent six-month slide still stands.

The Iranian rial firmed to 1,716,000 to the dollar by Wednesday 3 June, its first gain since the fighting started. It had hit a record 1,746,000 on Monday 1 June , then eased to 1,730,000 on Tuesday, a recovery of roughly 1.7 per cent on the open market tracked by Alanchand 1. Traders moved on Secretary Rubio's sequencing testimony, not on any signed instrument. The gain rests on a Senate sentence, which means it can reverse on the next round of state-media denials.

That 1.7 per cent does not undo much. The currency had shed 43 per cent over six months before this week , and a three-day bounce leaves it close to its record low. A family in Tehran buying imported insulin still pays near-record rial prices at the counter, so the recovery reads on a trading screen long before it reads on a pharmacy receipt. Brent Crude sat around $95 to $97 across the same days, firmer on the same diplomatic optimism 2.

The relief and the squeeze arrived together. OFAC has just cut the stablecoin rail the Central Bank of Iran leaned on to defend this exchange rate , so the very week confidence lifted the rate, Tehran lost its fastest tool to hold it there. The bounce came from hope; the means to sustain it shrank on the same days.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran's currency, the rial, has been losing value steadily since the conflict began in February 2026. On 1 June it hit a record low: 1,746,000 rials to the dollar. Over two days it recovered slightly to 1,716,000, still far weaker than before the conflict but moving in the right direction for the first time in months. The recovery happened because traders interpreted Rubio's Congressional testimony as a sign that a deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz might be possible. No agreement has actually been signed, so the rate rests on spoken words rather than a verified commitment. On the same two days, the US Treasury sanctioned the crypto exchanges that Iran's central bank had been using to buy dollars and support the rial, removing that support mechanism on the very days it was being tested.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The rial's structural vulnerability has two separate drivers. The first is the 43% accumulated devaluation from the sanctions shock and the conflict slide, which reflects the gap between Iran's export revenues (constrained by sanctions and the Hormuz blockade) and its import demand (inflexible for food, medicine and industrial inputs).

The second is the absence of a credible central-bank intervention mechanism: the CBI cannot defend the rial through conventional foreign-exchange reserve sales because its reserves are partly frozen and partly inaccessible due to its own SDN listing, so it was using informal crypto channels as a substitute.

Brent crude at $95-97 on the same days reflects the same diplomatic optimism, but from the opposite direction: oil traders priced a Hormuz reopening as plausible, which reduces the scarcity premium. The rial and Brent moving on identical signals with opposite sign (rial up, Brent down from conflict peak) confirms that both markets are trading on Rubio's testimony rather than any structural change.

First Reported In

Update #116 · Washington signs a sanction, not a strike

The National· 3 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Oil markets / Lloyd's underwriters
Oil markets / Lloyd's underwriters
Futures markets priced CENTCOM's strikes-complete statement as a de-escalation signal and pushed Brent down 1.7 per cent to $94.71, even as the IRGC declared Hormuz closed. Lloyd's war-risk premiums held elevated because institutional de-listing requires a UN Security Council resolution that Russia and China have just shown they will block.
Pakistan (mediator)
Pakistan (mediator)
Interior minister Mohsin Naqvi carried dual civilian and military letters to Mojtaba Khamenei in Tehran on 6-7 June with no public response. The IRGC's Hormuz closure on 11 June shows the corps is acting independently of the channel Pakistan is using, making the mediation structurally unable to produce a binding commitment without direct IRGC access.
Russia and China
Russia and China
Russia and China voted against GOV/2026/40 at the IAEA Board, following through on the blocking position coordinated with Grossi in Geneva on 5 June; both states continue to oppose Western institutional pressure on Iran at every multilateral venue.
E3 and IAEA (UK, France, Germany)
E3 and IAEA (UK, France, Germany)
The E3 co-sponsored IAEA resolution GOV/2026/40, adopted 21-3-10 on 10 June, demanding Iran disclose 440.9 kg of unaccounted HEU and admit inspectors to four denied facilities. The 10 abstentions and Russia-China noes leave any Security Council referral without a viable enforcement path.
IRGC / Iran military command
IRGC / Iran military command
The corps declared Hormuz closed to all traffic on 11 June and claimed two vessels struck, overriding the MoU its own civilian negotiators were pursuing through Pakistan. The closure order used the Persian Gulf Strait Authority apparatus to convert a toll mechanism into a military prohibition.
Trump administration / CENTCOM
Trump administration / CENTCOM
CENTCOM completed a second day of strikes on Tehran, Sirik and Minab, rejected the IRGC Hormuz closure as inconsistent with observed transit, and said strikes were complete. Hegseth framed the bombing explicitly as the negotiation: the method is coercive deal-making with no stated pause threshold.