Key Takeaways: Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon and a stalled US-Iran peace process are keeping a $3-to-$5 war premium embedded in crude prices even as tankers resume flowing through the Strait of Hormuz.
Key Takeaways: Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon and a stalled US-Iran peace process are keeping a $3-to-$5 war premium embedded in crude prices even as tankers resume flowing through the Strait of Hormuz.

Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon and a stalled US-Iran peace process are keeping a $3-to-$5 war premium embedded in crude prices even as tankers resume flowing through the Strait of Hormuz.
Brent crude traded near $79 a barrel Monday after spiking above $82 over the weekend, as Israeli military operations in Lebanon and the postponement of US-Iran talks revived fears that the fragile Hormuz reopening could reverse.
"The market is caught between a structural supply recovery pulling crude lower and a peace process that keeps stalling, injecting a risk premium on every escalation headline," said Jim Burkhard, vice president and head of research for oil markets at S&P Global Commodity Insights.
Brent has shed roughly 20% to 25% from its 2026 peak of $107.77 in mid-May, as tankers resumed transiting the strait — nearly 10 million to 12 million barrels moved through in a single day last week, including the first Saudi-owned vessels since the conflict began. Yet the unwind stalled near $79 after planned US-Iran talks in Switzerland were postponed Friday and Israeli troops struck Hezbollah positions at the Ali al-Taher ridge, prompting Iran to again claim it had halted Hormuz traffic. WTI crude held near $75.
The contradiction between Iran's rhetoric and the physical flow data is the central tension: as long as barrels keep moving, oil drifts lower toward the low $70s, but any genuine disruption — from a Lebanon escalation or a breakdown in US-Iran talks — could spike Brent back toward $90 or $100 in a single session. Goldman Sachs on June 16 cut its Brent forecast to $80 for late 2026 and $75 for 2027, assuming the de-escalation holds.
The supply recovery is gathering momentum on multiple fronts. Kuwait announced it would increase production, and Lloyd's of London and Chubb launched a $400 million marine war-risk insurance facility to help vessels resume transit through the strait. US Central Command lifted restrictions on traffic to and from Iranian ports, and tankers carrying previously stranded crude began exiting the waterway. Iran's crude loadings collapsed to below 300,000 barrels per day in May from 1.5 million in April, and a recovery toward pre-conflict levels would add more than 1 million barrels a day back to global supply — a significant bearish force if the political conditions hold.
The peace process that enabled the reopening is proving fragile. The White House confirmed Vice President JD Vance would not travel to Switzerland for the planned talks, citing unresolved logistical issues. President Trump renewed threats of US strikes unless Iran curbs its proxies in Lebanon and warned Tehran against closing the strait. Iran demanded an end to the war in Lebanon as a condition for further talks, tying the Hormuz reopening to a conflict that shows no signs of resolution. Israeli troops remain in a six-mile security zone inside southern Lebanon, and the military struck twice Tuesday at what it said were Hezbollah militants near the Ali al-Taher ridge — operations that Trump and Vance rebuked as "heavy-handed."
The economic costs of the four-month disruption are still working through the system even as crude prices fall. The World Bank's June Global Economic Prospects report projects global inflation will reach 4% in 2026, up from 3.3% in 2025, even assuming oil disruptions ease quickly. Fertilizer prices could jump as much as 38% this year as Gulf supply disruptions work through agricultural markets. The Federal Reserve on June 18 raised its PCE inflation forecast to 3.6% by December, up from 2.7% in March, with nine of 18 voting members now expecting at least one rate hike before year-end. Simon MacAdam, deputy chief global economist at Capital Economics, said higher inflation is already baked into many economies, with natural gas prices to households lagging the upstream market by around three months.
The last increment of the war premium is proving the hardest to drain. Iran's leverage over the strait — through mandatory insurance demands, closure claims, and its ability to stall talks — means a residual risk premium will persist even as supply normalizes. Tehran has every incentive to keep the waterway contested, extracting insurance revenue and maintaining a bargaining chip that benefits its own exports. The result is a market where the structural bias points lower toward $72 WTI, but the tail risk of a spike above $90 remains live with every headline from Lebanon or Geneva.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.