Oil prices continue slide amid hopes for peace, opening of Strait of Hormuz
Oil prices are continuing to drop, as hopes rise for a return to stability in global energy markets before the signing of a framework agreement on ending the United States-Israel war on Iran. Futures for Brent crude due for delivery in August dipped nearly 1 percent on Wednesday
Oil prices are continuing to drop, as hopes rise for a return to stability in global energy markets before the signing of a framework agreement on ending the United States-Israel war on Iran.
Futures for Brent crude due for delivery in August dipped nearly 1 percent on Wednesday, extending declines of about 5 percent on each of the previous two days.
The international benchmark stood at $78.24 a barrel as of 08:00 GMT, the lowest price since March 3, three days after the start of the war.
After rising more than 50 percent during the conflict, the price of crude on Wednesday afternoon in Asia was only about 7 percent higher than before the US and Israel launched attacks on Iran on February 28.
โThe immediate prognosis, it seems, is optimistic and assumes no significant setbacks,โ Tamas Varga, an analyst at PVM Oil Associates in London, said in a commentary.
โOver the last four trading sessions, Brent, for example, has fallen by $17 [per barrel], a discernible vote of confidence that the worst, at least as far as supply disruptions are concerned, is behind us,โ Varga said.
Vandana Hari, the founder of the Singapore-based oil market analysis provider Vanda Insights, said that while the announcement of the US and Iranโs memorandum of understanding (MoU) has brought relief to markets, the โhardest part, on delivering the pledges and promises, is yet to comeโ.
โCrudeโs slide is entirely sentiment-driven,โ Hari told Al Jazeera.

