Oil returns to pre-crisis levels and gives fuel prices some slack
Brent eased back toward 72 dollars, returning to levels seen before the Middle East conflict. At home, petrol and diesel should hold steady.
After weeks of jumping with every headline out of the Middle East, oil finally caught its breath. The Brent barrel eased back toward 72 to 73 dollars, returning to the levels it held before tensions in the region spiked.
The explanation is almost mechanical: when the market fears the conflict will cut supply, prices rise; when the fear eases, they fall again. That is what happened in recent days, with Brent dropping more than five per cent in a single session.
And at the pump?
The good news comes with the usual fine print. A falling barrel tends to take a while to reach the tank, but estimates point to stability as soon as next week: standard 95 petrol should sit around 1.877 euros a litre and standard diesel around 1.769 euros. In other words, no big shocks for now.
It is worth remembering why this matters even to people who never look at markets. The oil price feeds into almost everything: what we pay to fill the car, the cost of moving fruit to the supermarket and, further down the line, inflation. When the barrel calms down, we all breathe a little easier.
Whether the calm lasts is another matter. With the Gulf still on edge, one fresh jolt could send the barrel climbing again.
See also: European markets and gold near record highs. Check the Brent quote on Trading Economics.
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