Date: June 25, 2026 | Brent Crude: Below $73/barrel | Down from: $126 (April 30 peak) | Source: Economic Times, Zerodha Pulse, Trading Economics
In one of the biggest commodity stories of 2026, Brent crude oil fell below $73/barrel on June 25 — the first time it has been at this level since February 27, 2026, before the US-Iran war began. From its war-peak of $126/barrel on April 30, crude has now fallen 42% in just 56 days. For India — the world’s third-largest oil importer — this is transformational news.
📉 The Crude Oil Collapse — By the Numbers
| Brent Crude Today | Below $73/barrel (intraday low) |
| Pre-war level (Feb 27) | ~$73/barrel |
| War-peak (Apr 30) | $126/barrel |
| Total decline from peak | $53/barrel (-42%) in 56 days |
| WTI Crude | ~$69/barrel |
| Last time crude was this low | February 27, 2026 — pre-war |
🕊️ Why is Crude Crashing?
1. Strait of Hormuz Reopening
The Strait of Hormuz — which carries ~17 million barrels/day (20% of all global oil) — is gradually resuming commercial tanker traffic following the US-Iran ceasefire accord. Removing this chokepoint risk has single-handedly deflated the war risk premium that had been baked into oil prices since February.
2. US-Iran Peace Framework
The 60-day negotiation window agreed upon between the US and Iran includes nuclear enrichment discussions, sanctions relief, and frozen Iranian fund releases. Even though the deal faces challenges (Israel-Lebanon tensions, US Congress pushback), markets are pricing in durable normalisation, not a fragile truce.
3. OPEC+ Supply Signals
OPEC+ members have signaled willingness to gradually increase supply, adding further downside pressure on prices as demand concerns from a below-average monsoon and global growth slowdown weigh simultaneously.
4. Strong Dollar = Weaker Oil
With the Fed maintaining a hawkish stance and 50.5% market odds of a rate hike in 2026, the dollar remains strong. A strong dollar makes dollar-denominated oil more expensive for foreign buyers, suppressing demand and prices.
🇮🇳 What This Means for India — The Big Picture
Economic Impact
- 💰 Every $1 fall saves India ~₹10,000 crore annually on its import bill
- 📉 $53 fall from peak = potential savings of ~₹5.3 lakh crore annually — the biggest positive macro shock in years
- 📊 CAD (Current Account Deficit) improvement: India’s CAD as % of GDP could fall significantly
- 💵 Rupee support: Lower oil imports = lower dollar demand = stronger rupee
- 📉 Inflation relief: Lower input costs across the economy; food, transport, manufacturing all benefit
- ✂️ RBI rate cut space: Lower inflation = more room for RBI to cut rates
Sector Winners
- ✈️ Aviation (IndiGo +4.6% today): Fuel = 35–40% of operating costs
- 🚗 Auto (M&M +3.85%, Maruti +3.81%): Lower logistics + input costs
- 🏭 Paints, Chemicals, Tyres: Petrochemical feedstock costs fall
- 🏦 Banks/NBFCs: Rate cut prospects improve — NIMs supported
- 🏗️ Infrastructure: Lower diesel costs for construction equipment
Sector Losers
- 🛢️ ONGC, Oil India: Revenue from oil production falls
- ⚡ Power Grid, NTPC: Energy sector repositioning
- 💹 OMCs (IOC, BPCL, HPCL): Marketing margins shift — inventory gains normalize
⛽ Will Petrol-Diesel Prices be Cut?
The critical question every Indian consumer is asking. Here’s the analysis:
- Current Petrol (Delhi): ₹111.18/L | Diesel: ₹97.83/L
- Crude at $73 vs ₹95.20 USD/INR = ~₹6,080/barrel landed cost
- At the last price revision, crude was around $80–85 range
- OMCs (IOC, BPCL, HPCL) are now making healthy marketing margins
- Government under pressure to pass crude benefit to consumers
- Election cycle analysis suggests Q3 2026 as window for revision
- Estimated potential cut: ₹5–10/litre on petrol, ₹4–8/litre on diesel
No official announcement has been made. Watch for OMC board meetings in July 2026.
📊 Crude vs Indian Assets — Historical Pattern
- Brent at $60–75 range = Nifty typically outperforms EM peers
- Rupee typically strengthens 2–3% for every $10 fall in crude
- Indian bonds rally (yield falls) when crude drops — RBI has more room
- FIIs tend to return to Indian equities when crude is falling
📌 Key Levels to Watch
- $70: Next major support — break below could trigger demand-side fears
- $75: Psychological resistance now turned support — watch for bounce
- $80: Key level for OMC pricing decisions in India
Sources: Economic Times via Zerodha Pulse, Trading Economics, HDFCSky, Business Standard. Published June 25, 2026. Not investment advice.
