Brent crude has fallen back to $72 per barrel, matching pre-war levels, as a surge of oil exports through the reopened Strait of Hormuz threatens to flip the market from shortage to glut.
Brent crude has fallen back to $72 per barrel, matching pre-war levels, as a surge of oil exports through the reopened Strait of Hormuz threatens to flip the market from shortage to glut.

Brent crude has tumbled back to around $72 a barrel, erasing all the gains from the Iran conflict, as a wave of trapped oil barrels rushes out of the Persian Gulf and threatens to overwhelm near-term demand. The international benchmark has now fallen 10.6 percent in the past week alone, its third consecutive weekly decline, after crude shipments through the Strait of Hormuz rose to their highest since the war began in late February.
"The oil price bubble has burst," Wood Mackenzie said in reducing its 2027 price forecast to $78 a barrel, even as it cautioned that Middle East oil operations will not return fully to normal for "the better part of a year."
The speed of the reversal has stunned markets. Brent briefly traded below $73 on Monday, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude slipped under $70 a barrel. JPMorgan slashed its 2027 oil price target to $63 from $75, and Citi cut its 2027 forecast to $65 from $80, warning of a potential oversupply of as much as 4 million barrels per day next year. The bank advised investors to "sell summer oil rallies."
The collapse in prices carries stark implications for producers. Shares of Exxon Mobil and Chevron have fallen more than 20 percent from their 2026 highs, as the windfall from the war proves shorter-lived than expected. For import-dependent economies such as India, the slide offers a fiscal reprieve — but the path back to market balance is anything but smooth.
The Great Unclogging
Dozens of tankers stranded inside the Gulf during the 100-day conflict have rushed to exit in recent days. U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright said flows briefly exceeded pre-war levels of around 20 million barrels per day, though ship-tracking data suggests overall traffic remains far below the roughly 125 daily crossings seen before the conflict. Some vessels have been disabling tracking systems during transit, further clouding the picture.
Outbound Persian Gulf crude exports are now rebounding to at least 75 percent of pre-war levels, according to Gelber & Associates. But inbound tankers needed to load crude sitting in onshore storage remain scarce — for every four tankers leaving the region last week, only one entered, far below pre-war norms, according to LSEG data. That bottleneck is delaying the restart of fields and refineries shut during the war, particularly for Kuwait, Iraq, Bahrain and Qatar, which have few alternative export routes.
Consultancy Rystad Energy estimates that shut-in production across the Gulf fell to 9.6 million barrels per day by mid-June from 11.7 million bpd three weeks earlier, and expects the region to return to pre-war output by December. Iran's output could reach 3.3 million bpd by year-end, above pre-conflict levels, if the U.S. sanctions relief stays in place.
From Shortage to Glut
The surge in supply is colliding with weak short-term demand. Refineries in Asia and Europe have already secured crude for July and August, leaving extra barrels with few buyers. Many tankers may have little choice but to remain at sea as floating storage, keeping those barrels off the market for weeks.
Last week, August Brent futures traded below the September contract, flipping into contango for the first time since the war began — a structure that signals near-term oversupply. That contango could persist for several weeks as the backlog clears.
The longer-term outlook is even more challenging. Global supply is forecast to fall by 3.9 million bpd in 2026 but rebound by about 8 million bpd in 2027 to roughly 110.3 million bpd, according to the International Energy Agency. Demand is expected to recover far more modestly, creating a potential surplus of roughly 5 million bpd next year.
JPMorgan's lead global commodities analyst Natasha Kaneva said the bank's revised forecasts reflect evidence of far greater demand destruction than initially assumed. "When commercial inventories decline, prices typically rise as market participants compete for an increasingly scarce physical supply," she wrote. "But when the market clears through weaker demand, the price response works in the opposite direction." Kaneva also noted that oil shipments through the strait started earlier than expected because the U.S. facilitated dark-of-night tanker transports before a formal agreement was announced.
Lingering Risks
While exports surge, the stability of the Strait of Hormuz remains uncertain. Under the U.S.-Iran interim deal, transit is supposed to be unimpeded and toll-free for 60 days while Tehran negotiates with Oman over a longer-term framework. That temporary arrangement leaves ample room for disruption.
A stark reminder came last week when Iranian forces fired on a Taiwanese cargo vessel transiting the strait, sparking tit-for-tat strikes with the United States. Although traffic resumed quickly, many shipowners and charterers remain wary. Mines in the waterway and insurance companies not yet fully on board are also weighing on traffic, according to Mizuho's director of energy futures Bob Yawger.
Markets appear to be shrugging off these political risks. But after months of severe disruption, the road back to balance is unlikely to be smooth — suggesting today's market optimism may be overdone.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.