The market’s collective sigh of relief was audible this morning as crude prices cratered by more than 8% following the surprise announcement of a US-Iran agreement. The pact, which eases sanctions in exchange for nuclear rollback, has sent a shockwave through the commodity complex. Brent crude slid to $72 a barrel, its lowest in six months. For the market, this is the equivalent of a de facto tax cut for the British economy. Lower oil prices ease the inflation squeeze, reduce business input costs, and boost household spending power. The FTSE 100 responded with a 1.5% rally, pushing the index above 7,600 for the first time in three weeks.
But let us not get carried away. The market is a rational discounting mechanism. This is not a return to the cheap oil era. The deal’s details matter: it is a phased agreement, with verification protocols that could unravel at any point. Iran’s oil exports may increase by 500,000 barrels per day within six months, but OPEC+ has already signalled it will adjust output quotas. The price action reflects a geopolitical risk premium being stripped out, not a fundamental supply glut.
The gilt market, however, remains cautious. The 10-year yield edged down to 3.94% as the oil shock lowers inflation expectations. But the Bank of England will not ease policy on this alone. Core inflation is sticky at 4.2%, and wage growth remains elevated. The market is pricing in one more cut this year, but that looks optimistic if the oil price slide proves temporary.
Currency markets saw a muted response. Sterling ticked up to $1.27 against the dollar, but capital flight from emerging markets remains a concern. The so-called ‘petrodollar recycling’ effect, where oil-exporting nations invest in Western assets, is already fading as those countries diversify into Chinese bonds.
For the UK investor, this is a double-edged sword. The FTSE 100’s heavy oil weighting means BP and Shell will drag on the index. Today’s gains were led by consumer staples and airlines, which benefit from lower fuel costs. But the long-term narrative remains one of fiscal discipline. The government’s borrowing costs are still elevated, and the oil price drop does not fix the structural deficit.
In summary, today’s price action is a correction to an overpriced risk premium. It is not the start of a new bull market. The prudent investor should use this rally to rebalance towards fixed income and defensive equities. The oil price has been volatile for three years; this agreement is just another chapter in a long saga.








