The oil market received a jolt this morning as news broke of a clandestine deal between the United States and Iran, brokered by Pakistan. West Texas Intermediate crude tumbled 4.2 per cent to $72.15 a barrel by mid-morning London time, while Brent crude slipped below $76. Analysts are scrambling to assess the implications for global supply, but for British motorists, the immediate outlook is one of relief at the pump.
The deal, details of which remain murky, reportedly involves Iran limiting its uranium enrichment in exchange for the lifting of certain US sanctions on oil exports. Pakistan, acting as an intermediary, appears to have offered guarantees to both sides. The market’s reaction is characteristically swift: the prospect of additional Iranian barrels hitting global markets has sent traders reeling.
This is, of course, the same market that has been on edge since Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel. The risk premium built into crude prices over the past year had been stubbornly high. Now, with this diplomatic breakthrough, that premium is evaporating. The question is whether it will stay gone.
For Britain, the effect is almost immediate. With the pound wobbling against the dollar, a cheaper barrel of oil translates directly into lower costs at the forecourt. Petrol prices, which have hovered around 145p per litre, could fall by as much as 5p in the coming weeks. The Treasury may breathe a sigh of relief: lower fuel costs ease inflationary pressures and give the Bank of England less reason to keep rates elevated. But one must ask: is this a sustainable reprieve?
Iran’s compliance with any deal is notoriously unreliable. The last time sanctions were eased under the 2015 JCPOA, Iran ramped up exports to nearly 4 million barrels per day before Trump’s withdrawal. This time, the circumstances are even more opaque. Pakistan’s role is particularly curious. A nation with its own economic troubles, teetering on the brink of default, suddenly emerges as a peacemaker. Either Islamabad has received substantial inducements, or it is being used as a convenient mouthpiece.
Gilt yields, meanwhile, have dipped slightly on the news, as traders price in lower inflation expectations. The 10-year yield fell 3 basis points to 4.12 per cent. But do not mistake this for a shift in fiscal sentiment. The government’s borrowing binge continues, and the market remains deeply sceptical of Reeves’s spending plans. A cheap oil fix does not solve the structural deficit.
What of the broader implications? Lower oil prices might encourage the BoE to cut rates sooner than anticipated, potentially as early as August. But that would be premature. Core inflation remains sticky at 3.5 per cent, and wage growth is still above 6 per cent. The Bank should not be fooled by a temporary dip in petrol prices.
For investors, the play is clear. Energy stocks will take a hit today: BP and Shell are down 2 per cent in early trading. But the long-term thesis remains intact. The world is still underinvesting in oil supply, and geopolitical risk is not going away. This deal could unravel within months, and the next crisis is always just around the corner.
One must also watch the dollar. If the deal holds, it could weaken, boosting commodity prices elsewhere. But for now, the market is treating this as a definitive supply shock. The herd is running, and the wise cfo knows that the herd often overcorrects.
Finally, let us not forget the environmental angle. Cheaper oil will do nothing to accelerate the energy transition. If anything, it will encourage more consumption and delay the shift to renewables. But that is a problem for another day. For now, fill up your tank and enjoy the brief reprieve.









