Key Takeaways
-Geopolitical risk from US-Iran strikes supports crude prices.
-US inventories continue an eight-week draw, tightening supply.
-Key technical levels: resistance $88.97–$89.94, support $88.25–$86.89.
-Oil markets remain sensitive to both Middle East developments and seasonal demand.
-A breakout or breakdown will set the near-term trend for WTI and Brent.
WTI crude recovered from a seven-week low, trading near $88.68 after fresh US strikes on Iranian targets. Brent crude rose to $92.11. The rebound followed API data showing US crude stocks fell by 9.12 million barrels and gasoline inventories declined by 1.19 million barrels, marking eight consecutive weeks of draws. Geopolitical risk and declining inventories combined to lift near-term bullish sentiment.
Geopolitical Risk
The renewed US-Iran military actions have heightened supply disruption concerns. Tehran continues to restrict traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, which carries about one-fifth of global crude and LNG. Traders are closely watching how ceasefire negotiations progress, as any escalation could add further upside to crude prices, while easing tensions could reduce the conflict premium.
Inventory Impact
US crude inventories remain tight, with stockpiles falling sharply despite OPEC+ approving an additional July production quota. Falling inventories reinforce near-term support, limiting downside despite easing geopolitical fears. Traders are assessing whether seasonal demand into the third quarter could further tighten markets.
Technical Analysis
CL-OIL is trading near short-term moving averages: MA5 at $88.73, MA10 at $88.83, and MA20 at $88.97. Resistance sits at $88.97 and $89.94, while support is at $88.25, $86.89, and $85.94. A clean move above $88.97 could signal stronger momentum toward $89.94 and $90.33, whereas a drop below $88.25 could open the way to further downside.
Market Outlook
Oil remains in a tug-of-war between easing geopolitical tensions and constrained supply. Traders can expect continued volatility until fresh catalysts emerge, such as updates on US-Iran relations, Strait of Hormuz access, and weekly US inventory data. Both headline risk and inventory pressure will continue to influence short-term direction.
Discover how geopolitical tensions and US inventory trends are influencing crude prices in the article below.