Oil Rises 3% After U.S. Bombs Iranian Nuclear Sites

While many were expecting the oil market to open for electronic trading at 6 p.m. ET with a bang, 30 minutes into trading, oil was up by barely 3%, despite the U.S. military’s overnight strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, a geopolitical incident that might normally have sent oil soaring.

At 6:27 p.m. ET, Brent crude was trading up 3.17% at $79.45 per barrel, while the U.S. crude benchmark, West Texas Intermediate (WTI) was trading up $3.18 at $76.19 per barrel in early New York trading. 

The muted reaction underscores how firmly markets remain anchored in OPEC+ spare capacity, robust global inventories, and bearish macro flows.

Previous incidents of this magnitude have triggered far sharper moves in crude markets. 

When Iran-linked militants struck Saudi Aramco’s Abqaiq facility in September 2019, temporarily halting 5% of global oil output, Brent futures spiked nearly 20% in a single day, marking the largest one-day price jump in history. Similarly, following the U.S. drone strike on Qassem Soleimani in early 2020, prices surged a much more modest ~4% amid fears of regional retaliation. Today’s tepid response highlights how much more insulated markets have become from geopolitical flashpoints.

The coordinated U.S. airstrikes hit Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan overnight, inflicting visible damage on enrichment and research infrastructure. Tehran has promised retaliation, but so far, energy markets are betting that escalation remains limited.

Veteran analyst Tom Kloza said on X that traders seemed to be “waiting to see if Iran disrupts Hormuz before lifting the gas price alarm,” while strategist Velina Tchakarova commented that despite rising tensions, “signal remains weak” due to high inventories.

Nearly 20% of global oil moves through the Strait of Hormuz. Should Iran retaliate there, today’s calm could break into a price spike that puts $100 oil back on the table.

For now, traders are holding their bets—watching, not panicking.

By Tom Kool for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    China’s Teapot Refineries Cut Operations to Their Lowest Level Since 2017

    The independent refiners in China, the so-called teapots, have slashed their refinery run rates to the lowest level since 2017, as high feedstock prices, weak domestic fuel consumption, and restricted…

    India Cuts Coal Imports as Power Plants Turn to Domestic Fuel

    India is boosting the share of domestic coal used in power plants designated to run on imported fuel, as rising local coal production and expanding renewables have helped to cut…

    Have You Seen?

    Oil Extends Losses on Expectations of Smoother Crude Flows via Hormuz

    • June 24, 2026
    Oil Extends Losses on Expectations of Smoother Crude Flows via Hormuz

    US CFOs in Survey Say Firms Mostly Absorbed Oil Price Shock

    • June 24, 2026
    US CFOs in Survey Say Firms Mostly Absorbed Oil Price Shock

    Global Physical Crude Markets Mired in Discounts as Middle East Ramps Up Supply

    • June 24, 2026
    Global Physical Crude Markets Mired in Discounts as Middle East Ramps Up Supply

    CarbonX CO2 electrolysis prize fund winner plots scale up timelines

    • June 24, 2026
    CarbonX CO2 electrolysis prize fund winner plots scale up timelines

    ITM, Gore eye 80,000-hour PEM life with ultra-thin membrane

    • June 24, 2026
    ITM, Gore eye 80,000-hour PEM life with ultra-thin membrane

    Analysis: Will Australia become a force in helium?

    • June 24, 2026
    Analysis: Will Australia become a force in helium?

    US Crude Oil Inventories Continue To Falter, SPR Struggling To Pick Up the Slack

    • June 24, 2026
    US Crude Oil Inventories Continue To Falter, SPR Struggling To Pick Up the Slack

    Trump Orders Gas Price Gouging Probe

    • June 24, 2026
    Trump Orders Gas Price Gouging Probe

    Malaysian Major Makes Gas Discovery in Suriname

    • June 24, 2026
    Malaysian Major Makes Gas Discovery in Suriname

    Qatar Says LNG Exports Could Return to Normal Within Weeks

    • June 24, 2026
    Qatar Says LNG Exports Could Return to Normal Within Weeks