Brent Crude settled at $71.99 on 26 June, down from $76.14 on 24 June . The global oil benchmark declined steadily through both the IRGC drone strike on the Ever Lovely and the US bombing of Iranian soil. 1
A US attack on a major oil producer and two damaged ships pushed Brent down more than 5.4 per cent across two sessions, not up, despite a direct US-Iran kinetic exchange. The war premium that carried the benchmark above $100 at the crisis peak never returned.
As long as Hormuz keeps clearing oil at its pre-crisis volume, an isolated drone strike that kills no one and stops no cargo registers as noise. Traders are pricing the corridor, not the conflict. The link between Hormuz violence and the oil price has, for now, gone quiet. 2
