Oil prices fall over 1% as US-Iran talks ease supply disruption fears

Brent futures ‌were down 73 cents, or 1.02%, to $70.84 a barrel by 0102 GMT, while US West Texas Intermediate crude fell 83 cents, or 1.21%, to $67.75 a barrel

crude oil, oil
In the previous session, both benchmarks fell more than 1% to their lowest levels in four months | Image: Bloomberg
Reuters BEIJING, July 2
2 min read Last Updated : Jul 02 2026 | 7:47 AM IST

Oil prices dropped in early trade on Thursday after Qatar said Iran and the US had made "positive progress" ​in indirect talks that concluded on Wednesday, focused on the ​Strait of Hormuz, which handled one-fifth of global oil supply before the war.

Brent futures ‌were down 73 cents, or 1.02%, to $70.84 a barrel by 0102 GMT, while US West Texas Intermediate crude fell 83 cents, or 1.21%, to $67.75 a barrel.

In the previous session, both benchmarks fell more than 1% to their lowest levels in four months.

Sources said negotiators for the US and Iran spent two days in Doha discussing maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz and unfreezing Iran's funds.

Though traffic has partially resumed, the two countries exchanged strikes last weekend following an Iranian attack on a cargo ship.

Iran is determined to win international recognition of its control over the strait even ‌if it has to do so by force, two senior Iranian sources said. Tehran has repeatedly said it will impose tolls on shipping starting in mid-August, after a toll-free period specified by the initial agreement expires.

Tanker traffic through the strait has started to recover, with US Vice President JD Vance saying oil flows through the waterway had returned to pre-war levels, without citing figures.

As the strait stays open and crude oil flows out, ​competition for market share keeps pushing oil prices down, and there are growing expectations of oversupply, Haitong ‌Futures said in a note.

Adding to supply at a time of falling oil prices amid the gradual reopening of the strait, sources said on Wednesday that OPEC+ ​oil-producing countries ‌will likely agree to a further hike in their output targets from August when they meet ‌on Sunday.

The target will increase by about 188,000 barrels per day for August, the same as for June and July, the sources said.

In the US, crude inventories fell by ‌3.8 ​million barrels to ​408.4 million barrels last week, the lowest level since September 2018, the Energy Information Administration said on Wednesday.

The draw, however, was smaller than analysts' expectations in ‌a Reuters poll ​for a drop of 4.5 million barrels. 

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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Topics :Crude Oil PriceOil prices slipGlobal crude oil price

First Published: Jul 02 2026 | 7:47 AM IST

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