Iran has spent years moving oil through gray-market channels to dodge sanctions. A new deal could let Tehran sell openly - reshaping the global oil market in the process.
What The Deal Changes
Before the war, Iran exported around 1.5 million barrels of crude a day, with much of it flowing through a "shadow fleet" of aging tankers that relied on steep discounts, ship-to-ship transfers, and buyers - mostly in China - willing to look the other way.
The deal would let Iran sell openly, which matters because Tehran has been producing below capacity - Rystad Energy estimates exports could climb to roughly 2 million barrels per day, about one-third higher than before the conflict.
The framework is a 14-point memorandum of understanding. Under it, the US Treasury would issue sanctions waivers letting Iran transport, insure, market, and get paid through normal financial channels. It would also restore toll-free passage through the Strait of Hormuz for 60 days and unfreeze more than $100 billion in overseas Iranian assets.
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What It Means For Oil Prices
More Iranian oil means more global supply, which usually means lower prices.
Saudi Arabia and the rest of OPEC+ have held production cuts in place for years to keep prices propped up - and only started gradually unwinding them in 2025. Extra Iranian barrels would punch a hole in that strategy.
That leaves OPEC+ with two options: trim production again to absorb the new supply, or let prices drift lower.
For US drivers, more global supply tends to show up at the pump as cheaper gas - for energy stocks, it usually works the other way.
What To Watch
The deal still needs to clear hurdles before any extra Iranian barrels reach the market. Some US sanctions are written into law, meaning Congress - not the White House - may decide how much relief actually sticks.
Watch OPEC+ closely. If Saudi Arabia cuts again to offset Iran, prices could hold - if not, the drop could be quick.
OPEC+ now has a decision to make.
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