Oil prices edged lower on Wednesday, retreating after three consecutive sessions of gains as markets turned cautious amid a fragile ceasefire in the Iran conflict and a high stakes diplomatic push between the United States and China.
Brent crude fell to $106.95 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate dropped to $101.52, as investors weighed geopolitical signals against tightening supply conditions.
Despite the pullback, oil has largely held above the $100 mark since the outbreak of hostilities involving Iran, following joint U.S. and Israeli strikes earlier this year and the subsequent disruption of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a critical artery for global energy flows.
The market remains highly sensitive to developments around the ceasefire, with uncertainty over its durability continuing to drive volatility. Earlier gains this week were fuelled by fading optimism that a lasting agreement would reopen the strait, through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas typically passes.
Attention has now shifted to diplomacy, as Donald Trump travels to Beijing for talks with Xi Jinping. The meeting is expected to touch on the Iran conflict, although Trump has signalled that Washington may not rely on Beijing to broker a resolution.
China remains a key player in the equation as the largest buyer of Iranian oil, even amid sustained pressure from Washington. The outcome of the talks could influence both enforcement of sanctions and the broader trajectory of the conflict.
Analysts warn that the scale of disruption is already significant. Supply losses exceeding one billion barrels have tightened the market, with projections suggesting oil could remain above $80 per barrel for the rest of the year even if tensions ease.
Beyond geopolitics, the economic ripple effects are becoming more pronounced. In the United States, higher fuel costs have contributed to rising inflation, with consumer prices posting their sharpest annual increase in nearly three years. Economists expect the pressure to feed into broader economic activity in the months ahead.
Elevated inflation has reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve will hold interest rates steady, a move that could dampen demand by making borrowing more expensive for businesses and consumers alike.
At the same time, supply dynamics continue to underpin prices. U.S. crude inventories have declined for four consecutive weeks, alongside a drop in distillate stocks, pointing to sustained demand even as global uncertainty deepens.
For now, the oil market sits at a delicate intersection of geopolitics and economics, where a single development, whether diplomatic or military, could shift prices sharply in either direction.







