Oil touches prewar levels on rising Middle East supply

June 24, 2026 8:44 PM EDT

Vessels at the Strait of Hormuz, as seen from Musandam, Oman, June 24, 2026. REUTERS/Stringer

By Anushree Mukherjee

BENGALURU, June 25 (Reuters) - Oil ‌prices fell on ​Thursday to ​levels last seen before the start of the Iran war as expectations of rising supply from the Middle East outweighed demand concerns.

Prompt-month Brent crude futures for August delivery were ‌down $1.28, or 1.74%, to $72.46 a barrel by 0845 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate ⁠lost $1.15, or 1.63%, to $69.19 a barrel.

Both contracts hit their lowest since February 27.

U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright told a forum that ‌flows through the Strait of Hormuz ‌were close to those before the start of the Iran war, with at least 20 million barrels having exited the strait in the last 24 hours.

A return to complete normalcy would take a ​few weeks, however, because the strait needs to be demined, he added.

"Most of the increase in flows from the Gulf is outbound —ships exiting the Strait," UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo said.

However, a significant ⁠increase in inbound flows requires shipping confidence to return, including safety assurances and mine clearance to allow insurance premiums to normalise, Staunovo said.

Rising ​Middle Eastern supply, together with Iran set to boost sales after a temporary reprieve from U.S. sanctions, drove down prices of physical crude oil cargoes around the ​world.

Goldman Sachs said it does not expect a large pick‑up ‌in Iranian production, even if sanctions relief extends beyond the August 21 expiry.

On the demand side, China is likely to remain the main buyer of Iranian crude, ⁠as EU and UK sanctions on Iranian oil and vessels remain in place, the bank added.

An accord agreed last week to end the U.S.-Israeli war, which began on February 28, has allowed the resumption of traffic through the strait.

It ⁠set up a 60-day period of negotiations to tackle tougher issues, such as Iran's nuclear programme. Wright said oil would ​continue to flow through the strait even if the deal did not hold, and that Iran would not be able to close it again.

Oman opened temporary routes on Wednesday to ease tanker departures from the strait, with the International ‌Maritime Organization and Omani authorities coordinating movements.

Meanwhile, Iraq will have to consider all options if its OPEC quota is not significantly increased, a senior Iraqi oil ‌ministry official told Reuters on Thursday.

The prospect of Iraq considering an exit from OPEC follows the surprise exit of ⁠the United Arab Emirates this year. Iraq ‌is one of five founding members ​and the group was formed in the Iraqi capital.

(Reporting by Anushree Mukherjee in Bengaluru, Colleen Howe in Beijing and Siyi Liu in Singapore; editing by Jacqueline Wong and ‌Jason Neely)



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