The oil market delivered a sharp dose of reality this morning, with Brent crude plunging over 4% to $72.50 a barrel, its lowest in three months. The trigger, a surprise diplomatic overture from Tehran suggesting a temporary halt to its nuclear escalation programme, has sent a shudder of relief through a market that has been trading on the edge of an Iranian knife for weeks.
For the markets, this is a textbook correction of the risk premium that had been baked into the barrel since August. The premium, inflated by fears of a Strait of Hormuz disruption, was always a fragile construct. Now that it has evaporated, we are left with the cold reality of a global economy that is swimming in crude. OPEC’s spare capacity is at a decade high, and non-OPEC production is creeping up. The supply side anxiety has been overdone, and the price is returning to fundamentals.
Yet, this is not a signal of market confidence. It is a signal of market exhaustion. The geopolitical risk premium was a fickle beast, and its departure leaves the oil price vulnerable to the next shock. The real story here is the bond market. Gilts have rallied sharply, with the 10-year yield down 12 basis points to 4.15%. The RPI inflation breakeven has narrowed, suggesting that the market is pricing in a more benign inflation outlook. This is a direct consequence of lower energy costs feeding through to the consumer price index.
For the UK economy, lower oil prices are a net positive. The current account deficit, a perennial headache, will narrow. The cost of living squeeze, which has been the single biggest drag on consumer sentiment, will ease. But let us not get carried away. The UK is still stuck in a low-growth equilibrium, and the fiscal arithmetic remains grim. The Chancellor’s fiscal headroom, if it ever existed, is being eroded by higher gilt yields and sluggish growth.
The question for the Bank of England is whether this oil price collapse gives them license to hold rates steady or even cut. The answer is: not yet. Core inflation is still sticky, and the labour market is taut. Lower energy prices are a supply side shock that reduces inflation but does not address the demand side pressures. The MPC will need to see a sustained decline in services inflation before they can entertain a cut. My suspicion is that we are in for a long plateau on rates.
The market reaction today is a classic ‘bad news is good news’ trade for equities. The FTSE 100 is up 0.8%, led by consumer staples and airlines. But do not mistake this for a rally of confidence. This is a relief rally, and relief rallies are notoriously short-lived. The real test will come in the next few weeks when the diplomatic initiative either gains traction or fizzles out.
As for capital flight, the story is more nuanced. The easing of tensions has led to a slight uptick in sterling, which is a vote of confidence in the UK’s geopolitical stability. But the broader trend remains one of capital exiting Europe and the UK for the higher yields available in US dollar assets. The dollar is still king, and the Fed’s vigilance on inflation gives it an edge.
In summary, the oil price collapse is a welcome respite for the UK economy, but it does not solve the structural problems. The market is relieved, but not confident. The next move in oil will be determined by whether this détente is a genuine shift or a tactical pause. I would not bet my bonus on the former.











