RockstarMarkets
All news
Markets · Narrative··Updated 2d ago
Part of: Iran Oil Shock

WTI Rebounds to USD 87 as US-Iran Ceasefire Probability Falls to 30%

Trump administration edits to preliminary terms and fresh missile strikes near Kuwait's Ali Al Salem Airbase have unwound six-week lows in crude, lifting XLE outperformance versus SPY even as EM equities shrug off the energy cost headwind.

R
Rocky AI · RockstarMarkets desk
Synthesised from 8 wires · 0 mentions in the last 24h
Sentiment
-25
Momentum
75
Mentions · 24h
0
Articles · 24h
4
Affected sectors
Related markets

Key facts

  • US-Iran ceasefire deal probability fell to 30% as of late May 2026, down from 50% earlier in month
  • WTI crude rebounded to USD 87 from six-week lows on ceasefire uncertainty
  • Fresh ballistic missile strikes near Ali Al Salem Airbase in Kuwait and Lebanese escalation ongoing
  • Trump administration requesting edits to preliminary ceasefire terms, signalling further delays

What's happening

The US-Iran conflict remains locked in a negotiating stalemate, and oil markets are pricing in a persistent geopolitical risk premium as formal ceasefire talks show little progress. The probability of a US-Iran ceasefire agreement has collapsed to just 30%, down from 50% at the start of May, leaving traders bracing for an extended period of elevated energy costs and supply-chain uncertainty.

President Trump's recent request for edits to a preliminary ceasefire deal has added a new layer of delay. Mixed messaging from both the US administration and Tehran over the timeline and terms of any agreement have eroded confidence that a breakthrough is imminent. Meanwhile, fresh ballistic missile strikes near military bases in Kuwait and escalating Israeli operations in Lebanon underscore the volatility of the broader Middle East conflict. These developments have lifted WTI crude from a six-week low back toward USD 87 per barrel, with Brent tracking similarly higher.

The energy shock is creating divergent pressures across asset classes. Energy stocks and commodity producers benefit from the higher price floor, but airlines, logistics firms, and manufacturing-heavy industrials face margin pressure from elevated fuel costs. Goldman Sachs warns of two-sided risks: while the Iran conflict reduces available supply, slowing economic demand could offset production losses, creating a dampening effect on prices. Emerging market equities are rallying despite the oil premium, suggesting that AI-driven growth optimism is currently outweighing energy-cost headwinds for growth assets.

The debate centres on whether the current geopolitical premium is sustainable or if recession fears will eventually compress oil demand faster than supply constraints support price. History suggests that oil peaks when growth concerns mount, but the persistence of Iran-related uncertainty could keep WTI elevated for months. If negotiations break down entirely, a fresh escalation in strikes or regional conflict could quickly lift crude above USD 100, inflicting severe margin pressure on price-sensitive sectors.

What to watch next

  • 01Trump-Iran deal negotiations and formal agreement signing: June 2026
  • 02US military response and Middle East escalation risk: ongoing daily
  • 03WTI crude technical break above USD 90-95 on further geopolitical shock: weekly monitoring
Mention velocity · last 24 hours
Coverage from these sources
Previously on this story

Related coverage

More about $CL

Topic hub
Iran Oil Shock: Tracking the Middle East Supply Risk Trade

Live coverage of the Iran conflict, Persian Gulf oil supply disruption, OPEC reaction and the cross-asset trades pricing it.