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#MyGateTradeStory about $XTIUSD $XBRUSD $NG
Markets close for the weekend. The Middle East does not.
Oil prices staged a modest recovery on Friday – WTI at $76.54, Brent at $80.57 – after one of the largest selloffs on record. But the real story is what happened after the closing bell.
Israel and Hezbollah – a ceasefire that isn't one
Friday started with Israel launching one of the most intense bombardments of the entire war. Israeli forces struck 80 Hezbollah targets across southern Lebanon. Lebanon's health ministry said at least 47 people were killed. Four Israeli soldiers died in a Hezbollah ambush. Israel's far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir posted: "All of Lebanon must burn".
Then, at 4 p.m. local time, a ceasefire was announced. A U.S. official confirmed it. The IDF confirmed it. Problem is – rescue officials in Nabatieh reported at least 12 air strikes after the ceasefire began. Israel said it would "continue to remove immediate threats". Hezbollah said it would fight as long as Israel occupies Lebanese territory.
So the ceasefire exists on paper. On the ground it is already being violated.
Iran plays both sides
The IRGC announced the Strait of Hormuz is closed again. Their reasoning: Israel hasn't withdrawn from southern Lebanon. The U.S. naval blockade hasn't been "completely lifted" – and under the MoU that process takes 30 days. The IRGC warned all ships to stay away. Any vessel that defies this will be targeted.
Hours later Iran's Foreign Ministry stepped in and dismissed the closure reports as "baseless". Shipping is continuing. Iran is adhering to the MoU.
So Iran's government is sending two contradictory messages. The IRGC says the strait is closed. The Foreign Ministry says it is open. One analyst put it bluntly: "Iran is using that gap" – the MoU lifts the blockade in phases, so Iran can claim the lift isn't done and call this a re-closure.
The nuclear talks that never happened
The US-Iran talks scheduled for Friday in Switzerland were postponed. JD Vance cancelled his trip. Iran's delegation suspended travel at the last minute because of Israel's attacks. One analyst said: "Iran has now bolted the Israel-Lebanon fighting onto that pretext to hard-stop the whole deal".
Oil shipments are moving – but the risk hasn't disappeared
Several tankers, including three Saudi-flagged vessels carrying 6 million barrels of crude, sailed through the strait after the MoU was signed. Analysts expect more than 85 million barrels of oil stranded in the Gulf to hit global markets. Brent is set for a 9% weekly decline.
But PVM Oil Associates analyst Tamas Varga said: "It lays bare the rocky road that lies ahead to achieve a full and uninterrupted resumption of oil flow through the Strait". Citi puts a 60% probability on sustained normalisation, with prices trending toward $60–$65 by Q1 2027. Commerzbank lowered its year-end Brent forecast to $80.
The gap between the headline and the reality
The market is pricing in a return to normal. Tankers are moving. Sanctions are being lifted. The war premium is coming out.
But the MoU is a 60-day negotiation period. Several key issues remain unresolved. Full normalization of oil flows could take months. Israel is not cooperating – Netanyahu said his forces will remain in Lebanon "as long as necessary". Iran's hardliners are exploiting every gap in the wording. And the US is mid-process on lifting its blockade.
Markets may close for the weekend. The Middle East does not. By Monday, traders may have a very different view of risk.
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.