The crude oil market is in turmoil this morning after news broke of a landmark agreement between the United States and Iran, mediated by Pakistan, that threatens to dismantle the delicate supply architecture engineered by Saudi Arabia and Russia. Brent crude slumped by 8% in early Asian trading, briefly touching $72 a barrel, its lowest level since December 2021. The deal, details of which remain sketchy, is rumoured to include a phased removal of sanctions on Iranian oil exports in exchange for verifiable limits on Tehran’s nuclear enrichment programme.
For the market, this is a seismic shift. Iran, which once pumped nearly 4 million barrels a day, has been hobbled by sanctions. Its return would flood a market already wrestling with weakening demand from China and Europe.
The immediate reaction is rational: traders are pricing in a glut. But this is not just a supply story. It is a geopolitical realignment that exposes the fragility of the OPEC+ cartel.
Saudi Arabia and Russia have spent the last two years tightening output to support prices, financing budgets and petrostates. The Iran deal, if implemented, would break their grip. Pakistan’s role is curious: a nuclear-armed state with its own economic crises, now casting itself as a peacemaker.
The City is sceptical. This smacks of desperation, not diplomacy. Currency markets are also reacting: the dollar is strengthening as capital flows into safe havens, while emerging market currencies are under pressure.
The gilt market remains jittery, with 10-year yields ticking up on inflation fears. The Bank of England will be watching closely. Lower oil prices could ease inflationary pressure, but the volatility is a risk.
For investors, this is a wake-up call. The era of stable OPEC+ management is ending. The market is now driven by geopolitics, not economics.
Stay nimble.









