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Oil falls ~20% off its wartime peak as Hormuz reopens

Oil falls ~20% off its wartime peak as Hormuz reopens

The US-Iran MoU sends Brent toward $77 and Aramco cuts its July price to Asia — even as the war banked Riyadh a routing windfall through the East-West pipeline

Leaders·Energy· easing Dinheiro de quem·Como as guerras realmente terminam ·9 takes ·atualizado 24 de jun. de 2026

Summary

Oil fell roughly 20% from its 2026 wartime peak as the US-Iran MoU reopened the Strait of Hormuz; after the 17 June signing Brent dropped to about $77 a barrel, a three-month low, with sharp swings around postponed talks and renewed-strike threats. Saudi Aramco followed by cutting its July Arab Light price to Asia by $6 to +$9.50 over Oman/Dubai — a larger-than-expected second straight monthly cut. Yet the war was not a clean loss for Saudi Arabia: Riyadh rerouted around 4 mb/d via the East-West (Petroline) pipeline to Yanbu, selling into the spike, and one estimate put weekly oil revenue about 10% above pre-war levels at the peak. With Hormuz reopening and OPEC+ unwinding cuts, the price slide now squeezes the breakeven the kingdom needs after a record deficit.

By the numbers

  • ~20% — fall in oil from its 2026 wartime peak.
  • ~$77 — Brent after the 17 June MoU, a three-month low.
  • $6 — Aramco's July Arab Light cut to Asia, to +$9.50 over Oman/Dubai.
  • ~4 mb/d — crude Riyadh rerouted via Petroline to Yanbu during the closure.

Why it matters

The same chokepoint that crushed Saudi export volume in Q1 handed it a pipeline-routing windfall on price; reopening reverses both — volumes return but prices fall. For Mohammed Bin Salman, the ceasefire is a mixed settlement: barrels flow again, but the revenue per barrel that financed Vision 2030 erodes.

What to watch

  • Where Brent settles as Hormuz traffic and OPEC+ supply normalise.
  • Aramco's August OSP as a read on Saudi market strategy.
  • The oil-price breakeven against the kingdom's widened deficit.