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BNY’s Geoff Yu highlights that Oil is back in focus as shipping through the Strait of Hormuz nears a standstill and ceasefire risks rise. iFlow data show energy equities flows stabilizing after June profit-taking, with valuations and under-ownership becoming more attractive. However, increased OPEC supply and weak Chinese demand are expected to cap long-term Oil price gains. Energy sector faces uneasy equilibrium “Energy prices are back in focus this week due to perilous state of the ceasefire. News that traffic through the Strait of Hormuz is at a near-standstill may reverse some of the recent easing in supply pressures. However, the market’s base case remains unchanged, i.e., that there will be no resumption of full-scale hostilities.” “The escalation drove oil prices higher and prompted the International Maritime Organization to urge shipowners to avoid the strait while safety canno
The sharp decline in Strait of Hormuz traffic underscores heightened geopolitical tensions, risking global energy supply stability and market volatility.
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TEHRAN, IRAN – APRIL 17: An Iranian surface to surface Ghasedak missile is driven past portraits of Iran’s late founder of the Islamic Republic, Ayatollah Ali khamenei (R), during the annual army day military parade on April 17, 2008 in Tehran, Iran. Getty Images The war with Iran and the recurrent closures of the Strait of Hormuz have rattled financial markets across the globe, but the greatest immediate costs are being borne by the Arab Gulf states, long safe havens of domestic and international investors. Missile strikes and drone attacks have damaged critical facilities, disrupted aviation, and undermined the aura of stability that had long distinguished these states in the often-turbulent Middle East. According to the April 2026 IMF Regional Economic Outlook Update, flight departures fell by roughly one-third in Abu Dhabi, about two-thirds in Dubai, and approximately three-quarters in Doha du
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The collapse of the U.S.-Iran ceasefire in Hormuz creates severe friction for oil and LNG routes, exposing corporate risk far beyond the price of crude. getty After a 23-day temporary ceasefire collapsed, U.S. Central Command said it struck more than 170 Iranian targets across two waves following attacks on three commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz. That same day, the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control revoked Iran’s temporary oil-sales authorization and replaced it with a wind-down license. Brent moved back above $76 recently, depending on the market snapshot used. That sequence looks like another oil shock. The larger signal is more awkward for companies: a ceasefire-linked route assumption and a sanctions permission both failed the same test. The oil market can move quickly. Trust in a shipping corridor moves more slowly. The next six months of Hormuz risk will b
Qatar's LNG production halt underscores the vulnerability of global energy supply chains to geopolitical tensions in strategic chokepoints.
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Oman's stance against transit fees in the Strait of Hormuz could stabilize global oil shipping costs, contrasting Iran's revenue-driven approach.
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The post Bitcoin price shows resilience above $60,000 amid renewed US-Iran hostilities appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Bitcoin price held above $62,000 after renewed fighting between the United States and Iran slowed traffic through the Strait of Hormuz and sent oil prices higher, reviving inflation concerns across global markets. Data from CryptoSlate shows that the largest digital asset traded near $63,000 on Thursday, holding above the $60,000 level that traders have watched since last month’s selloff. The move came even as renewed US strikes on Iranian targets and retaliatory attacks by Tehran raised the risk of a broader disruption to energy flows from the Persian Gulf. Brent crude settled 5.2% higher Wednesday at $78.02 a barrel, its highest close since June 19, after briefly topping $80 during the session. US crude also rose, while shares were mixed and bond markets reflected renewed concern that higher energy costs could keep inflation elevated. For Bitcoin, the oil move a
Escalating military tensions in the Strait of Hormuz could disrupt global oil supply, impacting inflation, central bank policies, and risk assets.
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The post Crude Oil Jumped to $74, and a Tiny Crypto Token Saw It Coming appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Crude oil price has jumped back to $74 a barrel after a fragile Iran ceasefire collapsed this week. Fresh tanker attacks near the Strait of Hormuz revived fears over the world’s most important oil chokepoint, and crude oil prices spiked in response. But the bounce did not catch everyone off guard. The last trading data before the truce broke shows big players were already betting on higher prices. A tiny corner of the crypto market, courtesy of the WTI Coin flashed the same signal. WTI Coin Details: RWA.xyz Big Traders Were Buying the Oil Price Dip The futures market may have called the move first. Each week, a US regulator publishes the Commitments of Traders (COT) report, which shows who holds oil futures and on which side. Want more insights like this? Sign up for Editor Harsh Notariya’s Daily Newsletter here. As of June 30, oil was still sliding toward $68 on fears of a supp