Brent at a yearly low: is relief at the pump on the way?
With Hormuz reopened, oil prices tumbled to around $72. Good news for anyone filling the tank — with the usual fine print.
Anyone who’s been wincing at fuel prices these past weeks can breathe a little. Brent, the benchmark that matters most for what we pay, fell to around $72 a barrel — its lowest since late February.
The reason is geopolitical: with the Strait of Hormuz open again and tankers moving, the fear of a supply cut has drained away. When the market stops panicking, crude falls. And when crude falls, sooner or later that reaches the pump.
Mind the fine print
Before celebrating, two brakes. First, the oil price doesn’t reach the station instantly: there’s always a lag of days to weeks, plus taxes that don’t move with the barrel. In Portugal, the tax slice of each litre is huge, so a 5% drop in crude never translates into a 5% drop in what we pay.
Second, the calm is fragile. The US-Iran ceasefire still hangs by a thread, and one spark could send the barrel jumping again. Anyone budgeting for the household would do well not to assume low prices are here to stay.
Even so, the direction is good. After weeks of watching the numbers climb, it’s the first time in a while that the wind is blowing in drivers’ favour.
See also: The Strait of Hormuz breathes again. Reference prices can be checked at the DGEG.
Imagem: Wikimedia Commons