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ANALYSIS: Oil Slips As Peace Hopes Reprice Middle East Risk, But Supply Tightness Keeps Market On Edge

Oil prices fell for a second consecutive session on Wednesday (May 6, 2026) as traders began to price in the possibility that restricted crude flows from the Middle East could resume, after the United States indicated that a possible peace agreement may be reached to end the war with Iran.
Reuters reported that Brent crude futures for July fell $1.52, or 1.38 percent, to $108.35 per barrel as of 0103 GMT, after dropping 4 percent in the previous session. US West Texas Intermediate futures for June declined $1.50, or 1.47 percent, to $100.77, after closing 3.9 percent lower the day before.
The immediate trigger for the decline was political rather than purely economic. According to Reuters, US President Donald Trump said he would briefly pause an operation to escort ships through the Strait of Hormuz, citing progress toward a broader agreement with Iran. However, the same report noted that Washington’s blockade of Iranian ports would remain in place, meaning the market is not yet dealing with a full restoration of normal supply conditions.
This current movement in prices is less a sign of abundant oil supply and more a reflection of reduced panic. For weeks, the market has carried a substantial geopolitical risk premium because of disruption around the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway between Oman and Iran that connects the Gulf to the Arabian Sea. The US Energy Information Administration has described Hormuz as one of the world’s most important oil chokepoints, noting that in 2024 around 20 million barrels per day of oil flowed through the strait, equivalent to about 20 percent of global petroleum liquids consumption.
The International Energy Agency has similarly underlined the strategic importance of the route. It says around 20 million barrels per day of crude and oil products moved through Hormuz in 2025, accounting for roughly a quarter of global seaborne oil trade. It also noted that alternative routes are limited, with only 3.5 million to 5.5 million barrels per day of pipeline capacity potentially available to redirect crude flows away from the strait.
This is why even the suggestion of a diplomatic breakthrough can move prices sharply. If tanker traffic through Hormuz normalises, the market could see the return of a large volume of Middle East crude, condensates, refined products and LNG. That would ease the pressure on refiners, reduce freight risk, lower insurance costs, and potentially cool inflationary pressure across oil-importing economies.
But the market’s caution is equally visible as Brent remains above $100 per barrel, which shows that traders are not treating the possible peace deal as a settled outcome. Reuters reported there had been no immediate reaction from Tehran at the time of the price move, while Trump’s statement also indicated that the blockade would remain “in full force and effect” even as the escort operation was paused.
The underlying supply picture also remains tight. Reuters reported that US crude oil inventories fell for a third week, while gasoline and distillate stocks also declined, citing American Petroleum Institute figures. Crude stocks reportedly fell by 8.1 million barrels in the week ended May 1, while gasoline inventories declined by 6.1 million barrels and distillate stocks by 4.6 million barrels.
Those numbers actually complicate the bearish price move; for instance, a fall in crude and refined product inventories would normally support prices, especially during a period when global supply routes are under stress. The fact that oil still declined shows how strongly geopolitical expectations are currently dominating the market. In simple terms, traders are reacting more to the possibility of future supply returning than to the reality of current inventory tightness.
The IEA’s April Oil Market Report captured the scale of the disruption. It said global oil supply fell by 10.1 million barrels per day to 97 million barrels per day in March, as attacks on energy infrastructure and restrictions on tanker movements through Hormuz produced what it called the largest disruption in history. The agency also said observed global oil inventories fell by 85 million barrels in March, with stocks outside the Middle East Gulf drawn down heavily as flows through Hormuz were choked off.
This has further trained the spotlight on the Asian market as the EIA estimates that 84 percent of crude oil and condensate and 83 percent of LNG that moved through Hormuz in 2024 went to Asian markets. China, India, Japan and South Korea were the leading destinations for crude moving through the strait.
That makes the current price fall especially relevant for Asia’s refiners, utilities and transport-heavy economies. A sustained reopening of Hormuz would ease procurement pressure, reduce the need for emergency stock draws, and lower the cost of replacing delayed Middle East cargoes with more expensive barrels from elsewhere. It would also soften the pressure on shipping lanes, which have become a key part of the oil price story.
For the Gulf, the issue is broader than crude prices alone, as the Strait of Hormuz is also central to LNG flows, particularly from Qatar and the UAE. The IEA says about 93 percent of Qatar’s LNG exports and 96 percent of the UAE’s LNG exports transit the strait, representing around 19 percent of global LNG trade.
The market is therefore watching three things at once: whether a political agreement is actually reached, whether vessel movements through Hormuz resume at scale, and whether inventories can stabilise after weeks of drawdowns. Until those conditions are met, price declines may remain vulnerable to reversal.
For now, oil’s retreat reflects a shift in sentiment rather than a confirmed change in fundamentals. The possibility of peace has lowered the fear premium. But tight US inventories, disrupted Middle East flows, limited alternative export routes and the absence of a confirmed settlement mean the market remains exposed to sudden swings.
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