Brent drops $4.86 below $100; Nikkei 225 closes above 65,000
Original: Japan’s Nikkei 225 tops 65,000 for first time as oil falls on Hormuz reopening hopes View original →
Brent crude falling $4.86 to $98.68 and Japan's Nikkei 225 closing at 65,158.19 are the market numbers behind the 25 May risk move. AP reported that regional officials said the United States was close to a deal with Iran that would end the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, while President Donald Trump said talks were proceeding in an orderly and constructive manner.
The commodity move met the Tier-1 threshold because Hormuz is a direct supply shock channel. AP quoted benchmark U.S. crude down $4.77, or more than 4%, to $91.83 a barrel, and Brent down $4.86 to $98.68. Axios separately put Brent around $98.76 on Sunday evening, 4.62% below Friday's close, and said the waterway handles about a fourth of maritime oil trade and a fifth of LNG trade.
Equities priced the same catalyst through energy-import sensitivity. Japan's Nikkei 225 rose 2.9% to 65,158.19, while TOPIX added 1.29% to 3,942.57, according to Jiji/Nippon.com. The move matters because Japan imports almost all of its oil, much of it through the strait, so lower crude reduces pressure on margins, inflation expectations and the Bank of Japan policy path.
The move was not a generic daily recap. It linked a commodity price reset, a named geopolitical negotiation, and a record close in a major equity index. European trading showed the same cross-asset channel, with airlines and banks gaining as crude risk eased and bond-market pressure moderated.
The next datapoints are physical rather than rhetorical: signed terms, tanker transit through Hormuz, production restarts, and whether Brent holds below $100 after U.S. and U.K. holiday liquidity normalizes. If shipping remains constrained, the index relief trade can reverse even with diplomacy still active.
Not investment advice. Verify all figures with primary sources before acting.
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WTI climbed 4.16% to $73.37 and Brent rose 4.23% to $77.30 after President Trump said the Iran memorandum of understanding was “over.” The move followed a U.S. revocation of a license tied to Iranian crude sales.
WTI crude settled 3.2% lower at $84.88 and Brent lost 3.4% to $87.33 after a senior Trump administration official put the odds of a U.S.-Iran Hormuz reopening agreement at 80%.
WTI crude rose from a $69.23 settlement to $70.24 in after-hours trading after U.S. Central Command said it struck Iranian missile, drone-storage and coastal-radar sites. Brent moved from $71.99 to about $72.98 as traders repriced Strait of Hormuz risk.