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Oil prices tumble on Mideast peace hopes

May 07, 2026 00:00:00


LONDON, May 06 (AFP): World oil prices dived Wednesday and stock markets rallied on fresh hopes for an end to the Iran war.

Washington believes it is close to reaching an agreement with Iran to reopen the key Strait of Hormuz and end the conflict, US news outlet Axios reported, citing two US officials. International oil benchmark Brent North Sea made a double-digit plunge to under $100 a barrel, before climbing back above that level after US President Donald Trump threatened to restart bombing Iran.

Brent crude futures were $8.04, or 7.32 per cent, lower at $101.83 a barrel by 10:27 a.m. ET (1427 GMT), having earlier dropped below $100 for the first time since April 22. US West Texas Intermediate lost $7.16, or 7 per cent, to $95.11.

A source from mediator Pakistan said the United States and Iran were closing in on an agreement on a one-page memorandum of understanding.

Iran said on Wednesday it was reviewing a new US proposal. An Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson, cited by Iran's ISNA news agency, said Iran would convey its response soon via Pakistan.

Iran had said earlier that it would only accept a fair and comprehensive agreement.

US media outlet Axios reported that the US expects Iranian responses on several key points in the next 48 hours, citing sources saying this was the closest the parties had come to an agreement since the war began. Both crude contracts hit their lowest in two weeks, with Brent hitting an intra-session low of $96.75 before paring losses after US President Donald Trump said it was "too soon" to consider face-to-face talks with Tehran, and as a senior Iranian MP said the US proposal was more of a wish list than a reality.

The US military said on Monday that it destroyed several Iranian small boats as part of efforts to help stranded ships exit the Strait of Hormuz.

"A deal announcement would move futures further immediately, in fact even the potential of a deal is already triggering a decline in oil prices," said Rystad Energy chief oil analyst Paola Rodriguez-Masiu.

However, the global oil flow would take time to normalize even if the strait is restored. "The six-to-eight-week lag between credible access conditions and real flow normalization is not a conservative estimate, it is a structural feature of how shipping markets work," Rodriguez-Masiu added.

Crude oil supply losses from halted marine traffic through the strait since the war began in February have driven up prices, with Brent trading last week at its highest since March 2022.

The Strait of Hormuz closure has resulted in a drawdown in global oil and fuel inventories.


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