Oil prices slide on reports US and Iran are nearing peace agreement

Oil prices slide on reports US and Iran are nearing peace agreement


Published Thu, May 7, 2026 · 07:00 AM

[NEW YORK] Oil prices fell sharply to two-week lows on Wednesday (May 6) as optimism grew about a possible end to the war in the Middle East, with reports the US and Iran were nearing an initial peace deal.

Brent crude futures settled US$8.60, or 7.83 per cent, lower at US$101.27 a barrel, having earlier dropped below US$100 for the first time since Apr 22. US West Texas Intermediate crude lost US$7.19, or 7.03 per cent, to US$95.08.

A source from mediator Pakistan said the US and Iran were closing in on an agreement on a one-page memorandum of understanding.

Iran said on Wednesday it was reviewing a new US proposal. An Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson, cited by Iran’s ISNA news agency, said Iran would convey its response soon via Pakistan.

Iran had said earlier that it would only accept a fair and comprehensive agreement.

US media outlet Axios reported that the US expects Iranian responses on several key points in the next 48 hours, citing sources saying this was the closest the parties had come to an agreement since the war began.

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“There’s a growing sense that the chance of the Strait of Hormuz reopening is greater, regardless of whether we get a lasting peace deal with Iran or not,” said Phil Flynn, senior analyst with Price Futures Group.

Both crude contracts hit their lowest in two weeks, with Brent hitting an intra-session low of US$96.75 before paring losses after US President Donald Trump said it was “too soon” to consider face-to-face talks with Teheran, and as a senior Iranian parliament member said the US proposal was more of a wish list than a reality.

The US military said on Monday that it destroyed several Iranian small boats as part of efforts to help stranded ships exit the Strait of Hormuz.

“A deal announcement would move futures further immediately, in fact even the potential of a deal is already triggering a decline in oil prices,” said Rystad Energy chief oil analyst Paola Rodriguez-Masiu.

However, the global oil flow would take time to normalise even if the strait is restored. “The six-to-eight-week lag between credible access conditions and real flow normalisation is not a conservative estimate, it is a structural feature of how shipping markets work,” Rodriguez-Masiu added.

Crude oil supply losses from halted marine traffic through the strait since the war began in February have driven up prices, with Brent trading on Apr 30 at its highest since March 2022.

The Strait of Hormuz closure has resulted in a drawdown in global oil and fuel inventories as refineries try to offset production shortfalls. “A partial deal may be enough for Strait of Hormuz shipping to gradually normalise,” said Raymond James analyst Pavel Molchanov, adding that if the decline holds, prices at the pump could cool over the next one to two weeks for US consumers.

US crude and fuel inventories continued to draw down last week, the US Energy Information Administration said on Wednesday, as countries around the globe scrambled to fill supply gaps caused by disruptions from the conflict in the Middle East.

Crude oil stocks fell by 2.3 million barrels to 457.2 million barrels last week, the EIA said, compared with analysts’ expectations in a Reuters poll for a 3.3 million-barrel draw. REUTERS

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Liam Redmond

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