• June 19, 2026

Tankers carrying a total of 80 million barrels of crude are preparing to move through the Strait of Hormuz after the signing of the preliminary deal between the United States and Iran.

The crude is on 40 tankers, of which 21 will be heading for Asia, with five going to China as their final destination and five others bound for Malaysia and Singapore, key regional transshipment hubs. None of the tankers is carrying Iranian crude.

On Thursday, reporter estimate the amount of crude waiting to get the green light to pass through Hormuz at some 62 million barrels destined for Asian markets. The supply waiting to exit the Strait of Hormuz could prompt some refiners to increase processing rates or opt for replenishing commercial stock tanks that have been drawn down over the past three months, the report suggested.

The news that there is so much crude about to head out into global markets will likely pressure oil prices further, after they slid down approaching pre-war levels already, even though some uncertainty remains as to the safe passage of tankers via Hormuz.

There are, however, indications that both sides in the peace negotiations mean it this time, reducing the risk of a reignition in the hostilities that prompted the closure of the chokepoint. This led several oil price forecasters to slash their outlook on crude earlier this week, including Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and Citi. The latter is the most bearish, expecting Brent crude to average $75 per barrel in the next quarter. Morgan Stanley, on the other hand, sees Brent crude at $90 in the third quarter, despite the reopening of Hormuz.

Source: Oilprice

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