Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Iran Conflict 2026
18APR

Rial hits new low on Day 100

2 min read
14:57UTC

Iran's rial weakened to 1,762,000 per dollar on 7 June, down from 1,736,000 on 4 June, erasing every gain the market had priced in from deal optimism.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iran's rial hit 1,762,000 per dollar on Day 100, erasing the recovery deal optimism had bought.

Iran's rial hit 1,762,000 per dollar on Day 100, 7 June 2026, weakening from 1,736,000 on 4 June, according to the tracking service AlanChand 1. The rial is the free-market exchange rate ordinary Iranians use, and it is the cleanest daily read on how the country's own people price the war and the prospect of a deal. The latest fall extends the retreat documented on 4 June , when the currency reversed an earlier bounce tied to US testimony.

The slide erases the recovery that diplomatic optimism had bought over the prior fortnight. Each signal of a possible agreement had nudged the rate back; the Day 100 low unwinds all of it, leaving the currency near its record weak point after touching 1,746,000 on 1 June . The market is treating the talks as producing nothing tradeable, and the depreciation compounds the cost of imported food and fuel for households already squeezed by sanctions.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran's currency, the rial, is the money ordinary Iranians use to buy food, medicine, and household goods. Many of those goods are imported, so when the rial weakens against the US dollar, everything bought from abroad costs more in rial terms. On Day 100 of the conflict, 7 June 2026, one US dollar costs 1,762,000 rials on the open market. Three days earlier it cost 1,736,000. Before the war began the rial was already under pressure, but the conflict and sanctions have accelerated the fall dramatically. Iran's own central bank reported inflation of 77.2% in the year to May 2026, the worst since the Second World War occupation of 1942, with daily-needs goods up 113% {{EVREF:/t/iran-conflict-2026/119/iran-inflation-at-worst-since-1942/}}. Currency traders use the rial as a real-time signal of how close a deal feels. When Rubio said the deal was '95% done' on 2 June, the rial briefly strengthened. By Day 100 that gain had completely reversed. The market's message is that signed paper has not arrived and may not arrive soon.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran's rial depreciation rests on a dollar-scarcity structural condition that predates the 2026 war. Under the maximum-pressure sanctions of 2018-2021 the rial fell from roughly 40,000 to the dollar to over 300,000; the conflict has accelerated the same dynamic by an order of magnitude.

The central mechanism is that Iran cannot freely sell oil for dollars, so it cannot maintain foreign-exchange reserves at the level needed to defend the currency. With reserves depleted and oil exports near zero, the open market rate reflects genuine scarcity rather than speculative attack.

First Reported In

Update #120 · The deal's last 5% is uranium nobody can find

GlobalSecurity· 7 Jun 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Rial hits new low on Day 100
The currency has unwound a fortnight of diplomatic hope, pricing the deal talk as worthless.
Different Perspectives
Hengaw and Iranian protest detainees
Hengaw and Iranian protest detainees
Hengaw documented three secret executions of protest-linked detainees at Isfahan and Karaj on 15 and 16 July, including Mohammad Amini Dehaghani, hanged over a January arson charge with no public trial record. Tehran is carrying out capital punishment against 2026 protesters while global attention stays fixed on the war with the US.
Russia
Russia
OFAC named Moscow aviation firm Avratek OOO and its principals Mariya Selina and Vadim Druzhbin directly for the first time in this war's Iran arms track, under an Executive Order 13382 designation issued 15 July. The designation converts years of rhetorical claims about Russian arms supply to Iran into named, sanctionable individuals and a documented company.
Bahrain
Bahrain
Bahrain sounded air-raid sirens during Iran's 14 July Gulf-wide barrage and was struck again in the 16 July Artesh claim against Sheikh Isa air base, home to the US Fifth Fleet. Manama's air-defence stocks were already reported near-exhausted before this second strike claim against the same base in a week.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait's armed forces intercepted the drones Iran's Army claimed against Ali Al Salem air base on 16 July and separately reported intercepting missiles and drones in Iran's Gulf-wide barrage on 14 July. Kuwait now absorbs strikes from two rival Iranian commands while hosting Camp Arifjan, the US logistics base Iran also claims to have destroyed.
Iran (Artesh and IRGC)
Iran (Artesh and IRGC)
Iran's regular Army claimed the 16 July drone strikes on Kuwait's Ali Al Salem and Bahrain's Sheikh Isa air bases under its own banner, Operation Saeqeh phase ten, while the IRGC separately claimed a mine strike closing Hormuz on 18 July. Two Iranian institutions are now claiming parallel operations, with neither claim confirmed by Kuwait, Bahrain or CENTCOM.
United States
United States
CENTCOM bombed the interior cities of Ahvaz and Yazd for the first time overnight into 17 July, Marines began boarding vessels including the tanker Wen Yao, and Treasury let General License X1 lapse at 12:01am the same day. Washington closed every remaining channel for de-escalation without a new executive action, a posture of attrition rather than a wind-down.