Oil eases and your wallet exhales: the Hormuz scare has cooled
Brent slid back toward $72 as tensions in the Strait of Hormuz eased. What it means for fuel prices in Portugal.
Remember the weeks when every headline out of the Gulf sent the price of diesel jumping? Well, the plot is shifting — and this time for the better.
Brent crude slid back toward $72 a barrel, and US WTI toward $69, after markets realised that oil is, after all, still flowing through the Strait of Hormuz. Saudi Aramco resumed loadings at its Ras Tanura terminal after nearly four months idle, and the growing sense that crude will keep moving took the pressure off prices.
Why it reaches us
Portugal has no oil wells, but it has tanks to fill and electricity bills to pay. When the barrel spikes on a geopolitical crisis, we feel it at the pump within days. When it cools, relief arrives too — though, let’s be honest, always more slowly than we’d like.
The analysts’ read is almost ironic: after months of fretting about a supply shock, what’s now on the table is the opposite — a possible glut, with China yet to fully revive its appetite for imports. Too much oil chasing too few buyers usually means falling prices.
The catch
None of this is guaranteed. The Middle East remains the great unpredictable variable, and the Bank of Portugal itself has warned that the main risks to inflation here come precisely from that board. One fresh flare-up at Hormuz and the film rewinds fast.
For now, here’s the rare bit of good news: a factor that spent months pushing prices up is, finally, pushing the other way.
Illustrative · Photo: Jakub Pabis / Pexels