The 1.3% Brent rise on the verbal stand-down, against a backdrop where prices had already shed 5.4% across 24-26 June through both an IRGC drone strike on M/V Ever Lovely and the first CENTCOM strike on Iranian soil, reflects a pricing structure that had stripped out the war premium before the stand-down was announced.
ING's commodity desk noted the market was discounting the re-opening announcement because the physical constraint persisted unchanged: mines remained uncleared, hundreds of vessels were stranded outside the strait, and Iran's single-corridor demand was unresolved. The Brent settlement of $71.99 on 26 June versus $72.91 on 29 June tells the operative story: a fortnight of the heaviest military exchange of the conflict, including base strikes, tanker attacks, and a minelayer destruction campaign, moved the global benchmark by less than a dollar.
Q2 2026 closing down approximately 30% represents the steepest quarterly Brent fall since the COVID-19 demand collapse of Q1-Q2 2020. The mechanism differs structurally: 2020's drop was demand destruction; 2026's was a supply-route disruption premium initially priced in and then progressively priced out as participants concluded the conflict would not produce a sustained multi-month supply reduction from alternative producing regions.
WTI settling near $69.70, below its pre-war range, reflects US strategic reserve drawdowns and domestic production levels partially insulating the American refining market from the Gulf transit disruption.
Lloyd's of London war-risk rates, not crude spot prices, are now the operative financial lever on physical supply: suspended war-risk cover prevents tankers from transiting regardless of the benchmark price, meaning the physical re-opening lags the headline price by the time it takes insurers to reinstate cover, which requires confirmed governance of the corridor rather than verbal stand-downs.