Oil Prices Dive As Hormuz Opens; These S&P 500 Stocks Are 'Exhaling'
Why it matters: Oil's plunge below $94 a barrel offers a temporary reprieve for some S&P 500 stocks, but consumers won't see pre-war gas prices soon.
- Oil prices plunged below $94 a barrel, on pace for the biggest drop since 2020, following the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and a U.S.-Iran cease-fire (MarketWatch).
- Iran is reportedly seeking up to $2 million per ship for tanker tolls through the Strait of Hormuz, with options for payment in Bitcoin (The Block, CoinDesk).
- Gas prices are not expected to quickly return to pre-war levels, even with the Strait of Hormuz reopening (NYT Business).
- Oil price fluctuations were noted ahead of a Trump administration deadline regarding the Iran deal (BBC Business).
Oil prices have plunged, with WTI crude dropping below $94 a barrel, on news of the Strait of Hormuz reopening and a two-week U.S.-Iran cease-fire, marking the biggest single-day drop since 2020. While this offers a reprieve for some S&P 500 stocks, experts caution that gas prices are unlikely to quickly revert to pre-war levels, as Iran also seeks up to $2 million per ship in tolls, potentially payable in Bitcoin.
