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21/04/2026 04:49 AST
Oil prices jumped more than 6 percent on Monday before paring gains ?on fears that the ceasefire between the US and Iran could collapse after the US seized an Iranian cargo ship, while traffic through the Strait of Hormuz stayed largely halted.
Brent crude futures had been up 6.05 percent by 11:07 a.m. Saudi time, before falling back to gains of 3.5 percent, or $3.16, by 5:07 p.m., leaving a barrel costing $93.54.
US West Texas Intermediate had been up 6.51 percent, before scaling back to a daily gain of 4.35 percent - or $3.65, with a barrel priced at $87.50.
Both contracts tumbled by 9 percent on Friday, their largest daily declines since April 18, after Iran said passage ?for all commercial vessels ?through the Strait of Hormuz was open ?for ?the remaining ?ceasefire ?period and ?US President Donald Trump said Iran has agreed to never close the strait again.
"Within 24 hours of Friday's 'completely open' announcement, there were already tankers that were fired upon by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, leading to more fears from the shippers on attempting to leave," said June Goh, a senior oil market analyst at Sparta Commodities.
"Market fundamentals are getting worse, as 10 (million)-11 million barrels ?per day of crude oil remains shut in," Goh ?said, referring to losses in oil production.
The ?US said on Sunday that it ?had seized an Iranian cargo ship that ?tried to run its blockade while Iran said it would retaliate amid ?growing worries of a resumption of hostilities.
Tehran also said it would not participate in a second round of negotiations that the US had hoped to kick off before its two-week ceasefire with Iran expires this week.
The US has maintained ?a blockade of Iranian ports, while Iran has lifted and then re-imposed its own blockade of the Strait, which ?handled roughly one-fifth ?of the world's oil supply before the war began almost two months ago.
"Oil markets continue to gyrate in response to oscillating social media posts by the US and Iran, rather than the realities on the ground which remain challenging for oil flows to resume in a rapid fashion," Saul Kavonic, MST Marquee's head of research, said.
"The announcement of the Strait opening proved premature," Kavonic said.
"Ship owners will be twice shy about heading toward the Strait again without receiving much more confidence that any announced passage is real."
More than 20 ships passed the strait on Saturday carrying oil, liquefied ?petroleum gas, metals and fertilizers, ?Kpler data showed, the highest number of vessels crossing the waterway since March 1.
Reuters
| Ticker | Price | Volume |
|---|
| (In US Dollar) | Change | Change(%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brent | 92.42 | -5.79 | -5.9 |
| WTI | 92.42 | -5.79 | -5.9 |
| OPEC Basket | 104.79 | 0.23 | 0.22 |
20/04/2026
Oil prices jumped, the US dollar rose and ?stock futures fell on Monday as investors dealt with conflicting messages about the Iran war and news that the Strait of Hormuz was closed again.
I
Arab News
15/04/2026
Oil prices tumbled early on Wednesday on rekindled hopes for a deal to end the Middle East war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
The retreat in crude reflected a sharp unwind in the war risk
Gulfnews
15/04/2026
Oil prices fell on Tuesday as signs of possible talks to end the US-Israeli war on ?Iran eased supply fears stemming from the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.
Brent futures edged 37 cents l
Reuters
14/04/2026
Oil prices jumped back above $102 a barrel on Monday as the US Navy prepared to block ships to and from Iran via the Strait of Hormuz in a move that could restrict Iranian oil exports after Washingto
Reuters
14/04/2026
OPEC on Monday lowered its forecast for world oil demand in the second quarter by 500,000 barrels per day, the producer group's monthly oil report showed in its first public assessment of the Iran wa
Kuwait Times