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Oil prices drop as investors consider a deal to end the Iran War, but uncertainty remains about Hormuz

Oil prices drop as investors consider a deal to end the Iran War, but uncertainty remains about Hormuz
Oil prices drop as investors consider a deal to end the Iran War, but uncertainty remains about Hormuz

The oil prices fell on Wednesday as investors evaluated the?U.S. - Iran peace deal. However, uncertainty about?the full resumption?of shipping through the?Strait?of Hormuz's?limited further drops.

Brent crude futures fell 16 cents or 0.2% to $78.80 per barrel at 0340 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate dropped 25 cents or 0.3% to $75.80 per barrel.

On Tuesday, both benchmarks fell 5% in a second session straight to reach their lowest levels in three months on the hope that an agreement between the U.S. and Iran would allow oil to flow through Strait.

"Markets have stripped out the embedded geopolitical risks premium in oil price," said Priyanka Sackdeva, Senior Market Analyst at Phillip Nova.

The road to normalisation is far from straightforward. Although political agreements are progressing, the physical tanker traffic in the Strait is still not fully recovered.

The United States would lift their blockade on Iran's ports and Iran would allow oil tanker travel through the Strait of Hormuz, which has been effectively blocked by U.S.-Israeli strikes since February 28.

Hiroyuki Kikukawa is the chief strategist at Nissan Securities Investment. He said that oil markets have?retreated due to expectations the Strait of Hormuz will reopen after the peace agreement. However, traders are holding off on further sales pending more details.

He added that WTI will likely remain volatile within a range between $10 above and below $80 per barrel.

Prior to the closure of the Strait, about a quarter of the world's crude oil and natural gas liquefied supplies passed through it.

Tuesday details of the interim agreement began to emerge. President Donald Trump said it would prevent Tehran from acquiring a nuclear weapon and a U.S. government official stated that it would allow Iran?to sell oil upon signing.

The not-yet-public memorandum extends a flimsy ceasefire that was agreed to in April by 60 days, allowing time for further talks towards a permanent truce.

Industry officials say it will take weeks, even months, to return to the pre-war levels of production and refinement.

Israel has disassociated itself from both the April ceasefire agreement and the latest U.S.Iran pact. This creates uncertainty as to whether the pact will be honoured.

Lebanon's National News Agency reported that Israeli drone strikes on three vehicles in southern Lebanon Tuesday killed at least four people and injured others. This prompted a rare public criticism from President Trump.

Data showed that China's crude throughput in May fell by 9.1% on the previous year, to its lowest level in nearly four years. It also indicated that refiners are starting to draw on their stockpiles in the face of the Iran War.

Sources said that the American Petroleum Institute's report showed that U.S. crude stock fell by 8.3 million barrels during the week ending June 12.

The Energy Information Administration is expected to release official figures at 10:30 am. ET (1430 GMT), on Wednesday. Reporting by Yuka Obaashi in Tokyo, Jeslyn Lerh in Singapore and Clarence Fernandez; editing by Sonali Paul & Clarence Fernandez

(source: Reuters)