Oil slides to pre‑war levels near $70 after US‑Iran accord, pressuring producersExecutive summary: Oil prices dropped nearly $30 after a US‑Iran deal was announced, settling just above $70 per barrel, returning to pre‑war levels. The decline reduces input costs for airlines, shipping and manufacturing while squeezing revenues for oil‑exporting nations and could influence inflation and monetary policy decisions. United States, Iran, oil market traders, OPEC members, major energy corporations. Market actors will watch for an OPEC+ response, further details on sanctions relief, and any release of strategic reserves; volatility may persist until supply‑demand clarity emerges.The oil price fell roughly $30 following the announcement of a US‑Iran agreement, settling just above $70 per barrel—a level not seen since before the conflict. This move eases cost pressures on energy‑intensive sectors but cuts revenues for exporters and raises questions about future OPEC+ policy and inflation trends.Connected developmentsEurope’s investors eye nuclear startups amid ‘massive scramble’ for sovereign energyElettricità, picco dei consumi a 55 GW: record 2026. Continuano i blackoutHistorical Iran‑US developments and oil price movementsAutokosten: Nur noch 3 Cent teurer: Diesel fast auf VorkriegsniveauAutokosten: Spritpreise nähern sich dem VorkriegsniveauIran-Krieg: Ölpreis von 150 Dollar möglich – Experte warnt vor KipppunktOpen the full case file on Beyond →
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