Oil falls 1% as investors focus on Hormuz flows after peace talks

Brent crude ‌futures fell $1.09, or 1.4 percent, to $76.81 a barrel and US West Texas Intermediate declined to $72.99 a barrel, down 87 cents, or 1.2 percent, as of 09:07 a.m. Saudi time. Shutterstock
Updated 23 June 2026
Follow

Oil falls 1% as investors focus on Hormuz flows after peace talks

SINGAPORE: Oil prices fell more than 1 percent on Tuesday, extending losses from the previous session, on signs of some progress ​in restoring crude flows through the Strait of Hormuz following US-Iran peace talks.

Brent crude ‌futures fell $1.09, or 1.4 percent, to $76.81 a barrel and US West Texas Intermediate declined to $72.99 a barrel, down 87 cents, or 1.2 percent, as of 09:07 a.m. Saudi time.

Prices fell more than 3 percent on Monday after the United States ​granted Iran a 60-day sanctions waiver following initial peace talks, and as officials ​reported a lull in hostilities in Lebanon under the broader agreement.

“The gradual increase ⁠in oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz continues to weigh on the market,” ​said ING analysts in a note.

Two crude tankers with just under 2 million barrels of oil ​sailed through the Strait of Hormuz on Monday, ship-tracking data showed, in a sign that traffic was picking up following weaker flows on Sunday due to concerns over passage through the waterway.

“Transits over recent days ​look to have risen sharply, (which) the market will treat as a proxy for both physical ​oil, perhaps paper oil, and diplomatic progress,” said Sparta Commodities’ head of research Neil Crosby in a ‌note. “It feels ⁠like we will be stuck in this bearish risk-off/optimistic mood until such time as something changes.”

The price declines come after a weekend that had appeared to put the week-old accord in jeopardy, including threats from US President Donald Trump to restart the war if Iran disrupted shipping ​through the Strait of ​Hormuz after Tehran ⁠declared the strategic waterway closed.

“There remains a prevailing dose of market scepticism, rooted in deep-seated mistrust between Washington and Tehran, suggesting that any ​return to pre-war oil prices is likely to be delayed rather ​than immediate,” ⁠said Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade.

Separately, analysts in a Reuters poll expect US crude inventories to have fallen last week, along with distillate and gasoline inventories.

On Monday, government data showed ⁠US crude ​stocks in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve fell to 331.2 million ​barrels last week, the lowest since June 1983, as supplies tightened in the wake of the US-Iran conflict.