Oil price path to the $60s pre-war levels could take years despite Hormuz deal, analysts

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Brent at $83 and WTI at $80 both remain well above pre-war levels, and the path back is constrained by inventory, insurance and messaging. The key market signal to watch is not ships exiting the Gulf but ships returning to load, the distinction analysts are drawing between a temporary opening and a durable one. Shipping insurance costs running at ten times pre-war rates will begin falling within days of a signed deal but are unlikely to reach pre-war levels for three to six months at minimum, keeping a cost floor under delivered crude prices. OPEC+ is the swing variable on the supply side, with analysts expecting Saudi Arabia in particular to move toward maximum production quickly, both to rebuild inventories and to satisfy political pressure from Washington. A sustained oversupply period, which itself requires at least a year to develop, would be the precondition for oil in the $60s.

--- Analysts warn it could take years for oil to return to pre-war levels near $67, with a billion-barrel inventory deficit, elevated shipping insurance and unresolved strait durability questions all slowing the path.

Summary: Source: Dow Jones, citing analyst commentary from Tortoise Capital, Infrastructure Capital Advisors, Efficio and CIBC Private Wealth

  • Brent crude settled at $83.17 on Monday, around 15% above its pre-war level of $72.48; WTI settled at $80.75, nearly 21% above its pre-war price of $67.02
  • Analysts estimate between 1 billion and 1.5 billion barrels of oil have been lost from global inventories since the war began on February 28, through production cuts and transit disruptions; a coordinated IEA release of 400 million barrels, including 172 million from the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve, has partially offset the shortfall
  • A sustained oversupply period lasting at least a year is seen as a prerequisite before oil prices could fall into the $60s, with analysts saying extended uninterrupted global flows would be required to rebuild inventories to that level
  • Seven OPEC+ members agreed earlier this month to raise July production targets by 188,000 barrels per day; analysts expect Saudi Arabia and others to push toward maximum output once the strait reopens, both to rebuild stocks and to satisfy Trump administration pressure
  • Shipping insurance costs remain around ten times pre-war levels; analysts expect rates to begin falling within days of a signed deal but project three to six months at minimum before a return to pre-war norms, requiring incident-free transit at scale of 100 or more vessels per day
  • Analysts say the key indicator of durable reopening is not ships successfully exiting the Gulf but vessels returning to load cargoes; conflicting statements from the US and Iran on toll arrangements and freedom of navigation risk delaying that normalisation

Oil markets have welcomed the US-Iran peace framework with a price decline, but analysts are clear that the journey back to pre-war levels is measured in years rather than weeks, constrained by a deep inventory deficit, elevated shipping costs and unresolved questions about whether the Strait of Hormuz is truly, durably open.

Brent crude settled at $83.17 on Monday, still roughly 15% above its pre-war level, while WTI at $80.75 sits nearly 21% above where it traded before hostilities began in late February. Analysts estimate the conflict has removed between 1 billion and 1.5 billion barrels from global inventories through a combination of production shutdowns and transit disruption. A coordinated IEA release of 400 million barrels, including 172 million from the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve, has partially bridged the gap but leaves a substantial deficit to rebuild. Analysts say an extended period of oversupply, itself requiring at least a year of uninterrupted global flows, would be the precondition for oil to trade back into the $60s.

OPEC+ is the most immediate lever on the supply side. Seven member countries agreed earlier this month to raise July production targets by 188,000 barrels per day, a move that had been largely symbolic while the strait remained effectively closed. A genuine reopening would ease the storage constraints that forced Gulf producers to curtail output, and analysts expect Saudi Arabia in particular to push toward maximum production quickly, driven both by the need to rebuild inventories and by political pressure from Washington.

Shipping costs are the other major constraint. War-risk insurance premiums running at around ten times pre-war rates are expected to begin falling within days of the deal being signed, but analysts project a minimum of three to six months before a return to pre-war norms. The threshold for confidence, analysts say, is not 20 or 30 vessels transiting per day but 100 or more, at scale and without incident.

The most telling market signal, analysts argue, will not be ships leaving the Gulf but ships returning to load fresh cargoes. That distinction, between a temporary release of stranded vessels and a genuinely restored trade lane, is what separates a tactical price move from a structural one. Conflicting US and Iranian statements on tolls and navigational control risk prolonging the uncertainty and delaying that inflection point.

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.

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