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Oil Fell Nearly 5% After The U.S. And Iran Reached A Peace Deal

Published Jun 15, 2026
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Summary:
  • U.S. crude fell about 4.8% to roughly $81 a barrel after the U.S. and Iran agreed to a peace deal.
  • Asian stocks rallied, with South Korea's market up 5.1% and Japan's up 3.6%.
  • Gold still rose about 2% to around $4,300, a sign investors are not fully sold on the deal yet.

Oil dropped and stocks jumped on news of a U.S.-Iran peace deal. Then gold, the thing investors run to when they are nervous, rose too. That last part is the tell.

The Relief Rally

News broke that the U.S. and Iran agreed to end nearly four months of fighting. That sent oil sliding, with U.S. crude down about 4.8% to around $81 a barrel.

Brent, the global price, fell about 4% to near $84. Investors had carried a war premium since February, and the deal let them set some of it down.

Stocks across Asia took off as that fear faded. South Korea's market climbed 5.1%, while Japan's rose 3.6%.

Markets cared this much for one reason. The deal should reopen the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow sea lane that a big share of the world's oil squeezes through.

Lower oil should ease prices at the pump soon. That is good news for drivers and shoppers.

We make sense of days like this, oil, stocks, and what it means for your money, in Market Briefs each morning, and you get a free investing masterclass when you join.

Why Gold Is The Real Story

Here is the part that does not fit a clean party. A true risk-on day usually pushes gold lower, not higher, as fear fades.

Instead, gold rose about 2% to around $4,300. It is the market's insurance policy, and it got pricier even as the threat supposedly faded.

Investors also rushed into safe-haven Treasurys, another classic fear trade.

One strategist read it plainly. The market does not trust the deal yet, and it is not even set to be signed until June 19.

Traders often buy gold when they fear the worst. They are not letting go of it yet.

What Cheaper Oil Means For You

The bigger payoff is not the oil price itself. It is what cheaper energy does to inflation.

Lower oil eases the cost of almost everything. That takes pressure off central banks weighing whether to cut interest rates, and many of them meet this week.

One bank expects oil to drift toward $80 by year-end if shipping gets back to normal. It says oil only needs to flow at 60% to 70% of pre-war levels to keep prices calm.

A rate cut makes loans and mortgages cheaper. That can lift stocks and the wider economy.

That could give central banks room to cut rates later on. Stocks tend to like calm plus cheap money.

What To Watch

The market is doing two things at once. It is cheering the deal while quietly hedging in case it falls apart, so June 19 is the date to circle.

Until then, every headline out of the region will tug at oil. The deal is the headline, but the gold price is the fine print.

For the five-minute version of every market-moving day, join Market Briefs, and a 45-minute investing course comes along with it.

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