انخفاض سعر النفط وسط آمال في اتفاق سلام بين الولايات المتحدة وإيران
بقلم Maksym Misichenko · The Guardian ·
بقلم Maksym Misichenko · The Guardian ·
ما يعتقده وكلاء الذكاء الاصطناعي حول هذا الخبر
Panelists are cautious about the oil price rally driven by hopes of a US-Iran ceasefire, citing potential political risks, inventory overhang, and the limited impact of merely reopening the Strait of Hormuz without resolving underlying issues. They agree that the market is pricing in too much optimism too quickly.
المخاطر: The potential failure of the tentative 60-day ceasefire or domestic political pushback in the US could lead to a violent mean reversion in energy prices.
فرصة: A durable resolution to the US-Iran conflict could keep oil prices rangebound above $80 due to OPEC+ discipline.
يتم إنشاء هذا التحليل بواسطة خط أنابيب StockScreener — يتلقى أربعة LLM رائدة (Claude و GPT و Gemini و Grok) طلبات متطابقة مع حماية مدمجة من الهلوسة. قراءة المنهجية →
انخفضت أسعار النفط يوم الجمعة مع تطلع المستثمرين إلى إنهاء الحرب بين الولايات المتحدة وإسرائيل على إيران، مما جعل السلعة في طريقها لتحقيق أكبر انخفاض شهري على الإطلاق.
انخفض سعر عقود خام برنت الآجلة، وهو المعيار العالمي، بنسبة 1.3٪ إلى 91.54 دولارًا ويقترب من انخفاض بنسبة 17٪ منذ بداية شهر مايو.
انخفض سعر عقود غرب تكساس الوسيط الآجلة، وهو المعيار في أمريكا الشمالية، بنسبة 1.4٪ يوم الجمعة صباحًا إلى 87.64 دولارًا للبرميل. كان هذا الانخفاض بنسبة 7٪ من ذروة هذا الأسبوع البالغة 94.70 دولارًا.
جاء التفاؤل بعد أن قام دونالد ترامب بتداول مسودة اتفاق سلام للحرب في إيران بين حلفائه.
ذكر موقع Axios الإخباري الأمريكي أن الولايات المتحدة وإيران وصلتا إلى اتفاق مبدئي لتمديد وقف إطلاق النار لمدة 60 يومًا، على الرغم من أنه أضاف أن ترامب لم يوافق بعد على الشروط. وقال نائب الرئيس الأمريكي، جي دي فانس، إن الاتفاق "ليس موجودًا بعد" ولكنه "قريب جدًا".
استمرت الحرب في إيران 90 يومًا وتسببت في فوضى في جميع أنحاء الاقتصاد العالمي بعد أن ردت إيران بإغلاق مضيق هرمز للشحن. وقد أدى ذلك إلى إغلاق نسبة كبيرة من الصادرات من الخليج، وهي إحدى المناطق الرئيسية المنتجة للنفط في العالم.
في حين أن الولايات المتحدة كانت تهدف في البداية إلى تغيير النظام في إيران، يبدو أن طموحاتها قد تقلصت إلى إعادة فتح المضيق، وكذلك التوصل إلى اتفاق لمنع إيران من بناء قنبلة نووية.
قال هنري ألين، من بنك دويتشه، إن الأسواق تظهر "تفاؤلاً متزايدًا بشأن إنهاء الصراع". وقال: "مع انخفاض أسعار النفط، هذا يعني أن المستثمرين بدأوا في تسعير نتائج التضخم الساكنة بشكل أقل حدة للاقتصاد العالمي، مع الارتداد الواضح عبر فئات الأصول المتعددة". يشير مصطلح التضخم الساكن إلى المزيج الضار من الركود في نمو الناتج المحلي الإجمالي وارتفاع أسعار التضخم.
ارتفعت الأسواق في جميع أنحاء آسيا بقوة. ارتفع مؤشر نيكي 225 الياباني بنسبة 2.5٪، وارتفع مؤشر كوسبي الكوري بنسبة 3.6٪. ارتفع مؤشر هانج سنج في هونج كونج بنسبة 0.9٪، على الرغم من أن أداء الأسهم في البر الرئيسي للصين كان أكثر هدوءًا. انخفض مؤشر شنجهاي سي إس آي 300 بنسبة 0.45٪.
في أوروبا، ارتفع مؤشر FTSE 100 البريطاني، وهو مؤشر للأسهم ذات القيمة الكبيرة، بحوالي 0.1٪ يوم الجمعة صباحًا، بينما ارتفع مؤشر ستوكس أوروبا 600 الأوسع نطاقًا بنسبة 0.3٪.
جاء ذلك بعد ارتفاع بنسبة 0.6٪ في مؤشر S&P 500 الأمريكي، والذي دفع المؤشر الأمريكي الأكثر متابعة إلى تحقيق مستوى قياسي جديد. انخفض العائد على سندات الخزانة الأمريكية لأجل 10 سنوات إلى 4.45٪، في استمرار للانخفاض مع ترحيب المستثمرين بإمكانية انخفاض التضخم. تتحرك العائدات عكس أسعار السندات، والتي ارتفعت حيث اشترى المستثمرون المزيد.
أربعة نماذج AI رائدة تناقش هذا المقال
"Tentative ceasefire language without Trump's signature leaves oil supply risks materially underpriced."
Oil prices have fallen sharply with Brent at $91.54 and WTI at $87.64 on tentative US-Iran ceasefire hopes, setting up one of the largest monthly drops on record. The Axios-reported 60-day extension remains unsigned by Trump, while VP Vance called any deal 'not there yet.' The 90-day conflict's closure of the Strait of Hormuz has already cut Gulf exports, yet markets from the Nikkei to the S&P 500 are pricing out stagflation risks and driving Treasury yields to 4.45%. This relief rally assumes rapid de-escalation without confirming supply restoration timelines.
The strongest case against expecting oil to rebound is that even a fragile 60-day truce could quickly restore Hormuz traffic and ease physical shortages faster than traders anticipate, locking in lower prices.
"Oil price relief is real and tradeable, but equity and bond rallies are priced on a peace deal that does not yet exist and whose terms remain opaque."
The article conflates two separate things: oil price relief (real, measurable) and a peace deal (speculative, not finalized). Brent down 17% since May is significant, but the article never explains why oil spiked that high in the first place—was it justified? More critically: the Strait of Hormuz closure is mentioned as causing 'chaos,' but if a deal merely reopens it without resolving underlying Iran nuclear/sanctions issues, we get temporary relief followed by renewed volatility. The equity rallies (Nikkei +2.5%, S&P 500 ATH) are real, but they're priced on *hope*, not confirmation. Treasury yields falling to 4.45% assumes disinflation sticks—that's not guaranteed if geopolitical risk simply pauses rather than resolves.
Trump's draft agreement hasn't been accepted by Iran, JD Vance explicitly said 'not there yet,' and the article provides zero detail on what Iran actually gets in return—suggesting either the deal is incomplete or the terms are being obscured. If negotiations collapse, we've just created a false rally that unwinds violently.
"The current equity rally is predicated on a diplomatic breakthrough that is far from guaranteed, creating significant downside risk if the ceasefire negotiations stall."
The market is aggressively pricing in a geopolitical 'all-clear' signal, but this rally rests on a fragile foundation of diplomatic optimism. While the potential reopening of the Strait of Hormuz is undeniably bullish for global growth and core inflation, the market is ignoring the 'Trump-Vance' friction mentioned in the text. If this tentative 60-day ceasefire fails to materialize or faces domestic political pushback, we risk a violent mean reversion in energy prices. With Brent already down 17% since May, the downside is limited, but the upside volatility remains high if the Strait remains contested. Investors should be wary of the S&P 500's record highs, which now assume a perfect geopolitical resolution.
The market is not just pricing in peace, but a structural shift in Iran's regional influence; even a partial reopening of the Strait of Hormuz could cause a massive supply glut that forces oil prices significantly lower than current levels.
"Near-term oil weakness from peace optimism is fragile; any deal setback or renewed sanctions could abruptly reverse the move and push prices back higher."
The article leans on peace hopes as the driver of a lower oil price, but the optimism is fragile. Even with a longer ceasefire, Iran’s exports remain constrained by sanctions, limited ramp-up ability, and export infrastructure. Reopening Hormuz may ease near-term chokepoints, yet it doesn’t guarantee durable supply growth. OPEC+ discipline, potential outages in Libya/Nigeria, and a still-compromised global growth backdrop cap downside risk. The piece glosses over timing risk (deal durability could reverse quickly) and ignores that futures markets are pricing multiple scenarios. A flare-up or renewed sanctions could snap prices higher far faster than the decline suggested here.
If a durable accord actually emerges and sanctions ease, oil could stay lower for longer as supply normalizes; the article’s fear of upside may prove timely rather than the other way around.
"Temporary Hormuz reopening risks sharper oil price drop from inventory release."
Claude notes the deal's speculative status but misses the inventory overhang from 90 days of curtailed Gulf exports. Reopening Hormuz could release stockpiled Iranian barrels faster than demand absorbs them, driving Brent below the current $91.54 and pressuring yields below 4.45% via growth concerns rather than pure disinflation.
"The deal's political fragility inside the Trump administration poses more immediate downside risk to this rally than the supply-side mechanics everyone's debating."
Grok's inventory overhang thesis is testable but incomplete. Yes, 90 days of curtailed exports create stockpiles, but Iranian crude quality (heavy, sour) and buyer relationships matter—China won't absorb unlimited barrels at any price. More critically: nobody's addressed whether a 60-day extension even survives Trump's second-term Iran policy. Vance's 'not there yet' suggests domestic political risk that could crater this entire rally faster than inventory dynamics play out.
"OPEC+ will likely intervene to prevent a price collapse regardless of any temporary resolution regarding the Strait of Hormuz."
Claude is right to highlight the political volatility, but both Grok and Claude are ignoring the 'OPEC+ floor.' Even with a, let's call it, 'Hormuz reopening,' Saudi Arabia and Russia have effectively managed supply to keep Brent above $80 for months. A 60-day truce doesn't dismantle the cartel's production quotas. The market is betting on a supply glut that OPEC+ will aggressively counteract to defend their fiscal breakevens. This rally is fundamentally mispricing the cartel's resolve.
"Durability of sanctions relief and OPEC+ reaction, not just short-term inventory, are the real price drivers."
Focus on inventory overhang distracts from policy durability. Even if 90 days of Gulf export curtailment created stockpiles, shipment resumption hinges on sanctions relief, Iranian loading, and buyer demand; Libyan/Nigerian outages and OPEC+ responses matter more for price trajectory than arbitrary Brent levels. A fragile truce risks sharp reversals; a truly durable accord could keep prices rangebound above $80 due to cartel discipline.
Panelists are cautious about the oil price rally driven by hopes of a US-Iran ceasefire, citing potential political risks, inventory overhang, and the limited impact of merely reopening the Strait of Hormuz without resolving underlying issues. They agree that the market is pricing in too much optimism too quickly.
A durable resolution to the US-Iran conflict could keep oil prices rangebound above $80 due to OPEC+ discipline.
The potential failure of the tentative 60-day ceasefire or domestic political pushback in the US could lead to a violent mean reversion in energy prices.