- Oil prices plummeted on Wednesday after President Trump announced a two-week ceasefirewith Iran. Futures for international benchmark Brent crudewere down about 17 per cent to about $91 per barrel, while S. benchmark WTI was down about 18 per cent, trading at around $93 per barrel on Wednesday morning.
- The Wall Street Journal reportedthat prices were heading for their biggest single-day drop since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.
- While oil prices are still higher than they were before the war with Iran, the massive drop indicates that markets are optimistic about the president’s ceasefire announcement.
- Trump said Tuesday that he would “suspend” attacks on Iran for two weeks, as long as Tehran agrees to keep the Strait of Hormuz open. The strait, off Iran’s coast, is a key oil shipping channel, with about 20 percent of the world’s oil travelling through the waterway on an average day.
- Since the start of the conflict, the strait has been mostly closed, with Iran threatening boats that cross through. This has sent oil prices soaring in recent weeks.
- It has also inflamed prices at the pump back in the U.S. Gasoline prices did not immediately react to oil prices dropping, as the national average gasoline priceon Wednesday was still around $4.16 per gallon. If oil prices remain low, gasoline prices could drop in the weeks ahead, though the oil price is likely to depend on the actions of the leaders of the U.S. and Iran.
(Source: The Hill)
