Brent Crude settled near $80.59 on Friday 19 June, and the price barely moved when the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) declared the Strait of Hormuz closed the next day 1. The 20 June re-closure landed on a Saturday, into thin weekend electronic trade with no ICE settlement to register it. Brent is the benchmark that prices roughly two-thirds of internationally traded crude, so a Hormuz closure that left it flat is a signal in itself.
This is the second IRGC closure this month that the market has discounted. The corps first declared the strait shut on 11 June, and Brent eased that day from its $96.34 peak on 10 June to $94.71, then fell to $89.25 by 12 June. Both declarations left the price roughly where they found it. The 11 June order produced a fall, not a spike, and the 20 June order produced no settlement move at all.
The market is tracking the operative reality rather than the announcement. Brent had already fallen to near $78.66 on 18 June and $77.22 before that , pricing a reopening that insurers had not validated. Traders read an IRGC closure as a leverage posture rather than a supply cut, because the Oman route keeps the barrels flowing whatever the corps announces . The implication for Iran is sharp: its cheapest escalation lever, a verbal closure, now moves the price not at all, and a genuine supply shock would require a physical interdiction on the Oman lane.
The counter-reading holds too. CENTCOM's transit data shows the strait is functionally open, and US naval presence is part of why, so Washington remains active on the water even as its instruments stay blank on paper. The price flatness reflects both that the barrels are moving and that the market no longer takes Iran's words on Hormuz at face value.
