Oil's retreat from the danger zone is a tailwind for equities, with Brent crude below $70 for the first time since the West Asia crisis erupted.
Oil's retreat from the danger zone is a tailwind for equities, with Brent crude below $70 for the first time since the West Asia crisis erupted.

Brent crude futures opened the new week below $70 a barrel for the first time since before the West Asia crisis, as easing supply fears and a recovery in Strait of Hormuz transits triggered a broad rotation out of energy hedges and into equities.
"The pullback in energy costs is a clear tailwind for the economy and corporate margins," said Julian Emanuel, senior managing director at Evercore ISI. "When oil exits the danger zone, history suggests stocks tend to rally as inflation fears recede."
Brent crude traded at $70.15 a barrel early Monday, down from an April peak of $110 as the West Asia conflict disrupted flows through the Strait of Hormuz. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude fell to $67.72. Stock-index futures gained ground, with S&P 500 futures rising 0.6% in early trading, as lower energy input costs boosted sectors from airlines to consumer discretionary.
The decline marks a dramatic reversal from just three months ago, when Brent spiked above $110 after the escalation threatened to choke off roughly 20% of the world's daily oil supply. The Strait of Hormuz — through which about 17 million barrels per day transit — has since recovered to roughly 50% of pre-conflict flows, according to UBS, as a U.S.-Iran memorandum of understanding took hold. The last time oil fell this sharply from a geopolitical peak, the S&P 500 gained 12% over the subsequent six months, Evercore data show.
Wall Street rushes to revise forecasts lower
UBS on Thursday cut its 2026 Brent forecast to $83.74 a barrel from $93.28, and its 2027 estimate to $75 from $85, citing the faster-than-expected normalization of Hormuz flows and a resumption of Iranian crude exports as the U.S. blockade eases. The bank now sees Brent trading in a $70-to-$100 range, with the path determined by the durability of the U.S.-Iran pact.
The revision follows a cascade of downgrades across Wall Street. Goldman Sachs lowered its 2026 Brent forecast to $85 from $90, while J.P. Morgan cut to $85 from $96. Morgan Stanley now expects Brent at $75 for the second half of 2026, and Citi sees prices sliding to $60 by the first quarter of 2027 — a level that would mark the lowest since the pandemic-era crash.
Barclays remains the most bullish among major banks, forecasting Brent at $100 for the third quarter and $95 for the fourth, arguing that depleted global inventories leave the market vulnerable to any renewed disruption. The bank's $96 full-year 2026 estimate, however, was trimmed from $100.
What lower oil means for the broader market
The pullback arrives as a net positive for most of the economy. Every $10 decline in the price of Brent translates to roughly $0.25 per gallon savings at the U.S. pump and reduces input costs across transportation, manufacturing and chemicals. For central banks, lower energy prices ease the pressure on headline inflation, potentially giving the Federal Reserve more room to consider rate cuts later this year.
India, the world's third-largest oil consumer, stands to benefit significantly. Union Petroleum Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said Thursday that Brent's decline to $70 from the April peak of $110 will eventually feed through to retail fuel prices, though he cautioned that petrol and diesel sold today were refined from crude purchased two months ago at elevated prices. State-run oil marketing companies incurred combined under-recoveries of about 1.89 trillion rupees ($22.6 billion) in the June quarter, he said.
The downside risks remain. UBS warned that a breakdown of the U.S.-Iran agreement or renewed threats to Gulf oil flows could send Brent back to $100, while more severe disruption scenarios could push prices to $120. OPEC+ is scheduled to meet later this month to discuss output targets, with the UAE already pushing toward record production following its exit from the cartel's quota system.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.