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Trump's announcement of a ceasefire between Israel and Iran has caused oil prices to fall over a week.

The oil prices fell on Tuesday, to their lowest levels in over a week. U.S. president Donald Trump announced that a ceasefire had been reached between Iran and Israel. This eased concerns about a supply disruption.

Brent crude futures dropped $2.69, or 3.76%, to $68.79 per barrel at 0006 GMT. This follows a session in which Brent crude futures had fallen more than 4% and reached its lowest level since the 11th of June.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude fell $2.7 or 3.94% to $65.46 a barrel after hitting its lowest level since June 9 during the session. It also dropped around 6%.

Trump announced Monday that Israel has agreed to a full ceasefire with Iran. He added that Iran would begin the ceasefire immediately and Israel 12 hours later. The war will end officially after 24 hours if both sides keep peace.

He stated that a "completely and totally" ceasefire would be implemented to end the conflict between both nations.

Tony Sycamore is an analyst at IG. He said, "With the ceasefire announcement we now see a continuation of risk premium built in to crude oil prices last week almost disappear."

Iran is OPEC’s third largest crude producer. The easing of tensions will allow Iran to export more oil, which would prevent any supply disruptions. This has been a major reason for the recent spike in oil prices.

The oil contract prices fell by over 7% in the previous session, after reaching five-month highs following the U.S. attack on Iran's nuclear facility over the weekend. This stoked fears of an expansion in the Israel-Iran war.

"Technically speaking, the overnight sale reinforces a resistance layer between approximately $78.40 ($October 2024 to June 2025 highs), and $80.77 ($the year-to date high). It's clear that something unexpected and detrimental to crude oil supply will be required to break through this resistance layer," Sycamore said.

(source: Reuters)