# [24H] Hormuz Reopening Prospects Push Brent Downward Even as Low US Stocks Add Volatility

*Issued Wednesday, June 17, 2026 at 4:42 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Issued**: 2026-06-17T16:42:27.313Z (3h ago)
**Expires**: 2026-06-18T16:42:27.313Z (21h from now)
**Category**: ECONOMIC | **Confidence**: 71% | **Impact**: CRITICAL
**Risk Direction**: volatile
**Affected Regions**: Global, Persian Gulf, North America, Europe, East Asia
**Affected Assets**: Brent Crude, WTI Crude, Tanker equities, Oil volatility indices (OVX), Energy‑heavy equity indices (FTSE 100, TSX Energy)
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/forecasts/13673.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/forecasts

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## Prediction

Over the next 24 hours, Brent and WTI front‑month futures are likely to trade with a slight downward bias, as markets price in an earlier‑than‑expected US–Iran deal and nascent Hormuz reopening, but intraday swings will remain elevated due to record‑low US crude inventories and Trump’s strike threats. The net effect is a compressed risk premium on multi‑week horizons but a fatter intraday volatility profile as traders whipsaw between détente and re‑escalation narratives. A sustained move lower in time spreads and implied volatility would indicate market confidence in the deal; a sharp rebound on any negative deal headlines or fresh Gulf incidents would contradict this forecast. Strategically, this tug‑of‑war will shape hedging behavior for airlines, refiners, and shipping firms.

## Drivers

- Repeated alerts that US–Iran deal may be signed earlier, accelerating Hormuz reopening
- Macron and G7 endorsement emphasizing keeping Hormuz open
- US crude stocks and SPR hitting their lowest level since 1985 with an 8+ million barrel draw
- Trump’s public threat to resume bombing Iran and consider new Russia sanctions
