Oil Market Thinks War Risk Is Real Again, And Peace Headlines Aren’t Enough

Source Beincrypto

US crude oil traded near $107.80 per barrel Tuesday after mixed signals from the Trump administration shook energy markets. Traders shrugged off temporary sanctions waivers and refocused on the risk of broader Middle East conflict.

The volatility shows an asymmetric pattern in oil pricing, where war headlines drive sharper moves than diplomatic ones. Analysts say the trend could keep inflation elevated and pressure global risk assets, including digital currencies.

Oil Reacts Faster to Conflict Than Diplomacy

Former hedge fund manager and host of Mad Money on CNBC, Jim Cramer, highlighted the imbalance, warning that crude could revisit its prior $119 high if talks between Washington and Tehran fail.

US Crude Oil Spot (WTI) Price PerformanceUS Crude Oil Spot (WTI) Price Performance. Source: TradingView

“Here’s the big problem with oil: these days it goes down less when Trump says there is a hint of peace and it goes up much more when there is a rumor of war. So if there is no peace this time oil could challenge its $119 high. All of this truce-carrot with no stick breeds higher and higher prices,” Cramer wrote in a post.

Volatility intensified after Iran’s Tasnim News reported a possible US waiver on Iranian oil sanctions. The proposal is tied to renewed nuclear talks.

The headline briefly pushed crude below $105 before traders unwound the move, echoing earlier swings around Iran ceasefire chatter.

Trump Delays Iran Strike, Extends Russia Waivers

The oil price dipped roughly 1% after President Donald Trump postponed a strike on Iran. Trump also extended separate waivers covering Russian crude shipments.

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent unveiled a 30-day general license tied to Russian oil cargoes. The order gives energy-dependent nations temporary access to barrels currently stranded at sea.

Bessent said the policy aims to steady physical crude flows and curb China’s stockpiling of discounted barrels.

“This extension will provide additional flexibility, and we will work with these nations to provide specific licenses as needed…It will also help reroute existing supply to countries most in need by reducing China’s ability to stockpile discounted oil,” Bessent stated.

Despite the diplomatic moves, the modest 1% slide indicates traders still see supply risks as the dominant variable.

Why Crypto Holders Are Watching

Higher oil feeds inflation expectations and tightens financial conditions, which can delay Federal Reserve rate cuts. That backdrop typically reduces appetite for risk assets like Bitcoin and altcoins.

Energy-driven inflation has become a defining 2026 macro theme, particularly as disruptions near the Hormuz strait restrict tanker traffic.

Three catalysts dominate the near-term watchlist. These include:

  • US-Iran negotiations
  • Additional sanctions actions, and
  • Any military development affecting Middle East shipping.

If diplomacy stalls, traders expect oil swings to stay elevated, and a sustained energy shock could mean tighter liquidity and sharper digital asset moves through summer.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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