Oil flows through Hormuz will take time to recover, banks say

Kitco Media
By Reuters
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Reuters
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June 18 (Reuters) - A recovery in oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz and oil production following the U.S.-Iran interim peace ​deal will take time, potentially several months, analysts at ‌two banks said.

Shipments through the strait, through which about a fifth of global oil supply passes, were disrupted during the Iran conflict, sending oil ​prices sharply higher. Brent crude rose to as ​much as $126 a barrel in April, a four-year high.

Goldman ⁠Sachs said it expects Middle East Gulf exports to normalise to ​pre-war levels by the end of July, and crude production ​to recover by October.

While ship availability is not a binding constraint on exports, cautiousness by shipowners could limit them, it said.

"We see shippers’ ​risk aversion as a potential constraint on the flows, along ​with Iran’s geopolitical goals over the upcoming 60-day nuclear deal negotiations," the ‌bank ⁠said in a June 17 report.

BNP Paribas said that even in a best-case scenario it would take several months for oil flows to normalise, and that this would require producers ​to bring back ​about 12 ⁠million barrels per day of shut-in production.

Bank of America said clearing mines would likely take ​months, not days, given logistical challenges, adding that ​oil ⁠markets could remain in deficit until the fourth quarter of 2026.

Oil has dropped since the U.S.-Iran deal, with Brent trading at ⁠around $77.16 ​a barrel as of 1403 GMT on ​Thursday as the agreement eased concerns over a prolonged supply squeeze.

Reporting by ​Anushree Mukherjee in Bengaluru; Editing by Alex Lawler and Jan Harvey

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