Oil prices pulled back on Friday, but not because the market suddenly feels safe. This shift is a tactical breather rather than a trend change.
Brent slipped back toward the $109 level. Meanwhile, WTI hovered in the high-$90s. This eased the pressure from Thursday’s spike that briefly pushed Brent near $120. Policy, not a shift in fundamentals, triggered the move. Washington is scrambling to throw barrels at the problem. Allies are also lining up to help stabilise flows through the Strait of Hormuz. This effort includes sending additional troops to the Middle East. That chokepoint still moves roughly a fifth of global oil and LNG.
Washington Deploys Multiple Levers
The U.S. is floating multiple levers at once. Sanctions relief on stranded Iranian cargoes could put barrels back into Asian markets within days. Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) releases are back on the table.
Diplomatically, the U.S. is trying to corral a coalition. Europe, Japan, and Canada are working to secure shipping lanes and keep tankers moving. Media reports citing US officials said that:
“The US military is sending thousands of marines and sailors to the Middle East.”
It is a full-court press to cool prices. However, the market isn’t buying the idea that this gets resolved quickly.
Long-Term Damage Limits Relief
Physical damage across the region has already taken real capacity offline. This includes refinery hits and LNG outages. Experts now measure the timeline to fix these issues in months or years. It is certainly not a matter of weeks.
The WTI-Brent spread is also blowing out to its widest in over a decade. This is another signal that something deeper is off. U.S. crude is effectively trapped inland. Meanwhile, global benchmarks price in geopolitical risk and seaborne disruption.
The Outlook for Crude
Even with Friday’s dip, the underlying direction hasn’t changed. As long as flows through Hormuz remain restricted, prices have a floor. If escalation continues, that floor moves higher.
The structure is still tight. The risks are still skewed. Ultimately, the system is still one disruption away from another spike.