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Oil prices on track for steepest weekly fall in 6 months

By Thomson Reuters Mar 26, 2026 | 8:12 PM

SINGAPORE, March 27 (Reuters) – Oil prices fell on Friday and were on track for the steepest weekly decline in six months after U.S. President Donald Trump said talks to end ​the war with Iran were going well and that he ‌would pause attacks on the country’s energy plants for 10 days.

Brent futures fell 84 cents, or 0.8%, to $107.17 per barrel as of 0353 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures lost $1.02, or 1.1%, to $93.46 per barrel, trimming gains from a ‌bullish ​previous session.

Both benchmarks were trading 4.6% lower ⁠on a weekly basis despite ⁠the Brent rising 5.7% and WTI gaining 4.6% on Thursday on fears of further escalation of the war.

“Despite talks of de-escalation, oil is trading on war longevity, not just headlines. Any direct ​damage to oil infrastructure or prolonged conflict could force markets to rapidly reprice higher,” said Priyanka Sachdeva, analyst at Phillip Nova.

While Trump ⁠announced a pause on attacks on Iran’s ⁠energy infrastructure, the U.S. has also sent thousands of ​troops to the Middle East, with Trump weighing whether to use ground ​forces to seize Iran’s strategic oil hub of Kharg Island.

An ‌Iranian official told Reuters that a 15-point U.S. proposal, conveyed to Tehran by Pakistan, was “one-sided and unfair”.

The war has taken 11 million barrels of oil per day out of global supply, with the International ⁠Energy Agency describing the crisis as worse than the two oil shocks of the 1970s and the Russia-Ukraine war on gas put together.

Analysts at Macquarie ⁠Group said if the ‌war begins to wind down soon, oil prices ⁠will fall quickly in coming months, but still ​remain at ‌pre-conflict levels. However, prices could rise to $200 if ​the war ⁠drags on until end of June, they said.

“With each passing day, market pressure is building. Asian countries are tapping buffer stocks and weighing demand adjustments,” said Mukesh Sahdev, founder & CEO of Australia-based consultancy XAnalysts.

(Reporting by Helen Clark in Perth and Sudarshan Varadhan in Singapore; Editing by Sonali Paul ​and Saad Sayeed)