Global oil markets shaken as Iran tanker attacks raise supply fears
By The Guardian, July 8, 2026Oil markets have recorded their sharpest price rise in nearly two months after a series of attacks on fossil fuel tankers near the strait of Hormuz led Donald Trump to declare that the ceasefire deal with Iran was over.
At the same time, UK short-dated bonds suffered their worst day since the end of March as the prospect grew of a Bank of England rate rise to cope with the renewed inflationary pressures.
The yield or interest rate on two-year gilts rose 15 basis points to 4.35% with a rate rise in November fully priced in and a 50% chance of another in December. The market gave a 75% chance to one rate increase by the end of the year earlier this week.
The FTSE 100 suffered its biggest one day fall since May, down nearly 1.7% at 10,489 on concerns about the impact of the latest increase in tensions on the global economy. But BP, 3.5% better, and Shell, up 2.2%. both bucked the trend as the oil price rose.
Brent is the global crude benchmark. jumped by nearly 6% on Wednesday to more than Ksh10,341 a barrel, the highest price since the US and Iran agreed the ceasefire while negotiating an end to the war last month.
Tanker attacks disrupt supply route
The fragile ceasefire appeared to disintegrate after Iran launched attacks on at least three tankers transiting the strait of Hormuz within 48 hours, including a vessel carrying about 8m cubic feet of liquified natural gas, which is considered the cargo most at risk of exploding.
At least four oil and gas tankers have turned back from trying to transit the strait, according to ship-tracking data, which has hampered efforts to normalise flows of oil and gas through the vital trade route after months of disruption.
Jorge León, the head of geopolitical analysis at Rystad Energy, said: “Tanker traffic through the strait of Hormuz has essentially stopped, which tells you more about risk perception right now than any statement from Washington or Tehran.”
The “real test” will come after the burial ceremony of Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei later this week, said León, once the US and Iran “show whether there is still an appetite for a diplomatic off-ramp”.
Global oil prices have fallen from highs of more than $110 a barrel in late May as more tankers were able to transit the strait amid hopes the US-Iran talks would bring an end to the war which has disrupted flows of about 20m barrels of oil a day from Gulf producers.
Rising energy costs
In Europe, the collapse of the ceasefire reignited a 5% increase in gas market prices. The benchmark Dutch contract increased by more than Ksh354 to Ksh7,222 per megawatt hour (MWh), while the UK equivalent rose by 6p to 116.75p per therm.
The return of rising energy prices risks raising household costs which have faced the steepest rise in summer energy bills in four years. If sustained, the higher market costs could mean rising gas and electricity prices in the winter as well as higher prices at the pump.
Luke Bosdet, a spokesperson for the AA motoring group, said: “This is news UK drivers didn’t want to hear ahead of the summer getaway later in the month. The ending of the ceasefire is ominous for UK pump prices but not all is lost.
“For starters, a feature of the US-Iran war has been highly volatile oil prices that have fed through to the pump. However, the sharp fall in petrol and diesel prices has by and large tracked the more recent fall in wholesale costs and come through to the pump far more quickly than would have been expected previously,” he said.
Analysts assess market outlook
Market analysts have stopped short of forecasting a return to oil prices of more than Ksh12,926 a barrel after finding the global market was more resilient to disruption than initially feared.
“Nothing can be ruled out,” said Tamas Varga, an analyst at PVM Oil Associates. “But the market’s admirable adaptability in weathering the original crisis, and the $56 decline in the price of Brent during May and June, must be kept in mind when revising oil price forecasts.”
The market initially expected a 20m barrel a day loss to global crude supplies as a result of the effective blockade on the strait of Hormuz from March this year. But Gulf producers have been able to use alternative supply routes and clandestine vessel crossings to reduced the net loss to 12.2m barrels a day.
Meanwhile, higher production from unaffected producers, the release of emergency crude stocks, and US sanctions waivers covering Russian and Iranian oil in floating storage added a further 9.1m barrels of supply.
“The conclusion is that the effective loss from the original 20m barrels a day was only 3.1m,” Varga added.