Oil Market Weighs Early Signs of Potential De-Escalation

Oil prices edged lower on Monday as markets weighed early signs of potential de-escalation in the Middle East against ongoing supply disruptions, Konstantinos Chrysikos, head of customer relationship management at Kudotrade, said in a market analysis sent to Rigzone on Monday.

“Reports of a possible agreement between the United States and Iran to halt hostilities and reopen the Strait of Hormuz have tempered supply concerns to a certain extent and pushed prices down,” Chrysikos said in the analysis.

“At the same time, OPEC+’s decision to raise output quotas could favor a decline in oil prices when tensions recede and oil exports return to normal levels. In parallel, a potential resumption of Iraqi exports could also weigh on the market if they materialize,” he added.

Chrysikos went on to warn, however, that underlying conditions remain fragile.

“Vessel transit through the Strait remained limited,” he pointed out.

“Looking ahead, oil prices are likely to remain highly sensitive to geopolitical developments in the Middle East,” he added.

“While any sustained progress toward a ceasefire could weigh on prices, the fragile security backdrop and ongoing disruptions suggest that any downside may be limited for now,” he said.

Rigzone has contacted the White House and the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs for comment on Chrysikos’ analysis. At the time of writing, neither have responded to Rigzone.

A statement posted on OPEC’s website on Sunday revealed that Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, UAE, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Algeria, and Oman have decided to boost production by 206,000 barrels per day next month.

A statement posted on OPEC’s website on March 1 revealed that these countries had decided to boost production by 206,000 barrels per day in April. Another statement posted on OPEC’s website on February 1 revealed that the eight countries had “reaffirmed their decision on 2 November 2025 to pause production increments in March 2026 due to seasonality”. 

In a comment sent to Rigzone on Monday, Naeem Aslam CIO at Zaye Capital Markets, noted that markets were opening the week “on the back foot as rising Iran linked geopolitical risk and a sharp uptick in oil prices reintroduce inflation concerns just as rate-cut hopes fade”.

“After last week’s strong rebound, this pullback looks less like a reversal and more like a reset – driven by profit-taking, elevated bond yields, and pressure on growth sectors,” he added.

“With sentiment now highly headline-sensitive, the near-term direction will hinge on geopolitics and energy price stability, keeping markets cautious, reactive, and range-bound,” he went on to state.

In another comment sent to Rigzone today, Aslam outlined that the oil price was “elevated, highly reactive, and vulnerable to sharp moves in either direction depending on how quickly rhetoric turns into reality”.

In a BMI report sent to Rigzone on Friday by the Fitch Group, BMI analysts revealed that they were revising up their 2026 Brent forecast to $78 per barrel from $70 per barrel, “reflecting a shift from our previous base case of a short, intense conflict to an ‘extend to end’ scenario lasting up to eight weeks”.

“A longer conflict increases the threat to physical infrastructure, prolongs disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz, and implies a slower post-war recovery, with impacts extending later into the year,” the BMI analysts warned.

In that report, the analyst noted that Gulf producers have cut upstream output by more than 10 million barrels per day, “while flows through Hormuz have collapsed, leaving a deficit of 13 million barrels per day or more”.

The BMI analysts said in the report that they see downside risks from an earlier than expected end to the conflict, stronger demand destruction, and the possibility that Brent remains buffered from tighter physical markets. They added, however, that escalation remains the key upside risk.

To contact the author, email 

 

  • Related Posts

    Trump threatens Hormuz blockade as Iran talks fail, oil flows at risk

    (Bloomberg) – President Donald Trump said the U.S. would blockade the Strait of Hormuz following the collapse of peace talks with Iran in Islamabad this weekend. “Effective immediately, the United…

    Oil Price Shock Drives 140% Surge in China’s EV Exports to Record High

    Chinese electric vehicle exports soared by 140% to a record high in March as the fuel price shock drove consumers back to EVs. China exported as many as 349,000 electric…

    Have You Seen?

    Trump threatens Hormuz blockade as Iran talks fail, oil flows at risk

    • April 12, 2026
    Trump threatens Hormuz blockade as Iran talks fail, oil flows at risk

    Recalibration and resilience to go the distance

    • April 11, 2026
    Recalibration and resilience to go the distance

    Vance Warns Iran Not to “Play Us” as He Prepares for Talks

    • April 11, 2026
    Vance Warns Iran Not to “Play Us” as He Prepares for Talks

    Northern Vietnam Power Utility Accelerates Grid Upgrades And Rooftop Solar Push To Meet Rising Demand

    • April 11, 2026
    Northern Vietnam Power Utility Accelerates Grid Upgrades And Rooftop Solar Push To Meet Rising Demand

    GSECL Seeks GERC Approval For Tariff Of 25 MW Palitana Solar Project In Gujarat

    • April 11, 2026
    GSECL Seeks GERC Approval For Tariff Of 25 MW Palitana Solar Project In Gujarat

    SECI Invites Bids For 4.45 MW Rooftop Solar Projects Across India Under RESCO Model

    • April 11, 2026
    SECI Invites Bids For 4.45 MW Rooftop Solar Projects Across India Under RESCO Model

    SECI Seeks ₹660 Crore Loan For 200 MW Solar Project In Madhya Pradesh

    • April 11, 2026
    SECI Seeks ₹660 Crore Loan For 200 MW Solar Project In Madhya Pradesh

    India’s Power Sector Roadmap 2026–2036 Balancing Renewable Growth With Grid Reliability – CEA

    • April 11, 2026
    India’s Power Sector Roadmap 2026–2036 Balancing Renewable Growth With Grid Reliability – CEA

    Global Renewable Energy Hits 49% Capacity In 2025 As Solar Leads Record Growth – RE Statistics 2026

    • April 11, 2026
    Global Renewable Energy Hits 49% Capacity In 2025 As Solar Leads Record Growth – RE Statistics 2026

    US Loans 8.5 Million Barrels of SPR Oil in Second Batch Since Iran War

    • April 11, 2026
    US Loans 8.5 Million Barrels of SPR Oil in Second Batch Since Iran War