WASHINGTON / Content Syndication Services / – Brent crude futures rose to $81.66 a barrel as supply concerns returned to the oil market. The global benchmark gained $1.09, or 1.35%, after touching an intraday high of $82.30. The move kept crude oil prices above $80 as traders tracked energy shipments through key Middle East export routes and monitored global inventory levels.

The rise followed renewed concern over flows through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway that links Gulf producers with global markets. The route remains one of the world’s most important energy corridors. In 2024, oil flows through the strait averaged about 20 million barrels per day, equal to roughly one fifth of global petroleum liquids consumption.
Oil trading remained volatile through the session. After the early rise, Brent later moved below $80 as fresh updates from U.S.-Iran talks eased some immediate concern over supply flows. West Texas Intermediate crude also gave up early gains. The price swings showed how quickly energy markets reacted to confirmed developments affecting shipping, sanctions and export access.
Middle East routes shape crude pricing
The International Energy Agency said in its June oil market report that global oil supply would fall by 3.9 million barrels per day on average in 2026. It said Gulf supply losses would only partly be offset by gains from non-OPEC+ producers. The agency also said shipping lanes and supply chains would need time to normalize after disruptions.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration said global oil inventories would fall by an average of 6.3 million barrels per day in the second quarter. It also said lower inventories were keeping Brent prices elevated while global flows remained disrupted. The agency’s data showed how inventory pressure has become a central factor for crude oil prices in 2026.
Inventories add pressure to oil markets
Market attention also stayed on refined fuel supplies in Asia. Regional crude imports have improved from earlier disruption lows, but fuel products remain tight in several markets. Diesel, gasoline and jet fuel prices have stayed sensitive to refinery runs, shipping costs and available inventories. These conditions added support to broader energy prices, even as crude futures moved during the day.
Brent crude remains the main global benchmark for oil buyers, refiners and investors. The move to $81.66 showed continued concern over supply security and transport routes, while the later pullback showed a market still reacting to confirmed updates. The session kept focus on Middle East shipping flows, global oil inventories and the balance between crude supply and fuel demand.
