Crude prices plunged more than 11% after Trump hinted the Iran war was nearly done and his Energy Secretary falsely claimed a tanker had been escorted through the Strait of Hormuz. But the Pentagon says the conflict is far from finished, and prices remain nearly 30% above where they started.
Oil markets experienced their most turbulent single session since the conflict began on 10 March 2026, with WTI crude plunging 11.94% to close at $83.45 per barrel and Brent losing 11.28% to settle at $87.80. The catalyst was not a ceasefire, not a formal diplomatic agreement, and not the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. It was a phone interview, a deleted social media post, and a set of contradictory signals from inside the US government that left markets desperately trying to figure out what, if anything, had actually changed on the ground.
The sell-off began after President Trump told CBS News on Monday evening that the war with Iran was "very complete, pretty much" and that it was "ahead of schedule." He added that ships were moving through the Strait of Hormuz and that the US was considering taking control of the waterway. Those comments alone sent prices sharply lower as traders rapidly unwound the conflict risk premium that had pushed crude to $119.50 just two days earlier. Then Energy Secretary Chris Wright poured fuel on the fire with a social media post claiming the US Navy had escorted a tanker through the Strait, triggering a brief additional plunge of more than 17% before the White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt stepped in to clarify: the claim was false.
Today's Oil Market: Price Surge Driven by Middle East TensionsThe most striking aspect of Tuesday's market-moving news was not the price fall itself but the contradiction at the heart of it. While Trump was suggesting the war was nearly over, Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth was telling reporters at a Pentagon briefing that the conflict would not end until the enemy is totally and decisively defeated, and that this would happen on the United States' own timeline. When Trump was asked directly to reconcile the two positions, he said both could be true: "It's the beginning of building a new country."
Iran offered no hint of imminent surrender. Tehran ruled out an immediate ceasefire while attacks continued. An Iranian foreign ministry spokesman said that as long as strikes continue, there is no point to talk about anything but defence and retaliation. Trump has separately stated that there will be no deal with Iran without unconditional surrender and threatened that Iran would be hit twenty times harder if it attempted to halt oil flows through the Strait. Neither side appears close to a position that would satisfy the other's conditions for ending the conflict.
Trump told CBS News that ships are moving through the Strait and that he is thinking about taking control of it. But the picture on the ground is considerably more complicated. Kpler analyst Matt Smith noted that only a handful of commercial vessels are currently transiting the waterway, a fraction of the pre-war volume of around 21 million barrels per day. The US Navy has confirmed it has not escorted any tanker through the Strait. Iran's foreign ministry has warned that tankers must be very careful, with spokesman Esmail Baghaei telling CNBC that as long as the situation is insecure, all maritime navigation must exercise caution.
Saudi Aramco's chief executive reinforced the gravity of the situation, warning on Monday of potentially catastrophic consequences for oil markets if flows through the Strait do not resume. The world's largest oil exporter making that statement publicly underscores that the partial reopening Trump implied has not yet translated into the kind of normalised tanker traffic that would genuinely unwind the supply disruption. Gulf Arab producers are still cutting output partly because crude is piling up in onshore storage with nowhere to go.
| Commodity | Pre-War (28 Feb) | Conflict Peak | Current (11 Mar) | vs Pre-War |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WTI Crude | ~$63/bbl | $119.48/bbl | ~$80/bbl | +27% |
| Brent Crude | ~$65/bbl | $119.50/bbl | ~$84/bbl | +29% |
| European Gas | Baseline | +80% week | Elevated | Well above baseline |
| Gold | ~$2,900/oz | $5,029/oz | ~$3,100/oz | +7% |
| US Avg Pump Price | ~$2.98/gal | $3.41/gal | ~$3.20/gal | +7% |
The sharp price fall has sparked debate among energy analysts about whether this is the beginning of a genuine normalisation or simply a volatile overreaction to political commentary. Bob McNally, president at Rapidan Energy Group, captured the mood precisely, noting that there is a lot of optimism in the market and that Trump's comments amounted to what traders used to call verbal intervention: the market collapsed on words rather than actions. McNally stressed that the market is still struggling to process the scale of the disruption, given that traders had assumed for decades that no country would ever be allowed to shut the Strait.
Economist Neil Shearing of Capital Economics has offered a relatively constructive view, arguing that if oil prices can fall back to the $70 to $80 per barrel range, the world economy may absorb the shock with less disruption than many initially feared. Eswar Prasad, professor of trade policy at Cornell University, echoed that perspective, noting the world economy has shown itself capable of shaking off significant shocks. However, PBS economics correspondent Paul Solman summarised the key outstanding question that neither optimist could fully answer: how long is this going to go on?
The oil market has entered a phase defined by extreme sensitivity to political signals rather than physical supply data. Every Trump statement, every Pentagon briefing, and every Iranian foreign ministry comment now has the potential to move crude prices by 5 to 15% in hours. That volatility itself is a problem for businesses trying to plan, airlines trying to set fares, and governments trying to set fiscal policy in a period of profound uncertainty.
The fundamental question the market cannot yet answer is whether Trump's optimism about a rapid end to the conflict reflects real intelligence about Iran's military and political position, or whether it is the same kind of aspirational rhetoric he has deployed throughout the campaign. Hegseth's simultaneous insistence that the enemy must be totally defeated creates a ceiling on any peace deal that Iran, now under the leadership of the hardliner Mojtaba Khamenei, seems unlikely to accept quickly. The gap between those two positions is where the oil price will live until one side blinks.
For now, the direction of travel is cautiously lower. If the Strait of Hormuz begins to see meaningful commercial tanker traffic in the coming days, prices could test the $75 to $80 range. If Iran retaliates against any new escalation or if talks collapse entirely, the market would rapidly reprice back above $100. The deleted post that moved markets by 17% in a matter of minutes was a reminder that in this environment, the next major price move is only one headline away.
