Oil prices maintained stability throughout Monday’s session following initial weakness, as market participants assessed Washington’s latest initiative to extract stranded commercial traffic from the Strait of Hormuz.
Brent crude showed minimal movement above the $108 per barrel threshold after experiencing an intraday decline of up to 2.4% during opening hours. West Texas Intermediate similarly held its ground near the $102 mark.
Brent Crude Oil Last Day Financ (BZ=F)
US Central Command verified its commitment to deploy military assets, including guided-missile destroyers, aerial units, and unmanned surveillance systems. The Wall Street Journal noted, however, that current operational parameters exclude direct Navy warship escort duties.
The declaration provided only fleeting support to crude markets. Industry experts and trading professionals immediately raised concerns about the strategy’s practical effectiveness.
A commercial tanker sustained damage from projectile strikes Sunday at a location 78 nautical miles north of Fujairah in the United Arab Emirates. UK Maritime Trade Operations documented the incident. While the vessel’s identity remains undisclosed, all crew members were reported unharmed.
Iran dismissed Washington’s proposal outright. According to Al Mayadeen, Ebrahim Azizi, chairman of Iran’s parliamentary National Security Commission, characterized any American intervention in the strait as a ceasefire violation.
Hostilities erupted in late February following joint US-Israeli military operations against Iran, justified by nuclear program concerns. A bilateral blockade has since emerged, with Tehran preventing Persian Gulf departures while Washington intercepts traffic associated with Iranian ports.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent indicated over the weekend that Iranian well shutdowns could commence “in the next week” as domestic storage capacity reaches maximum levels.
Recent weeks have witnessed crude prices reach their most elevated levels since 2022 due to the ongoing conflict.
OPEC+ members reached agreement over the weekend on a modest symbolic adjustment to June production quotas, as the coalition aimed to project market confidence following the United Arab Emirates’ departure from the group.
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