Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer

Recommended

  • 6/23/2025
While the oil price almost returned to record highs, it flattened out in later trade, with the market wanting to believe Iran won't block the Strait of Hormuz.

Category

📺
TV
Transcript
00:00Having jumped 2% this morning, the oil price is once again approaching the 2025 highs of
00:07January when the US imposed new sanctions on Russia in President Biden's final days.
00:13But the fact that the oil price only went up 2% and then eased back this afternoon to
00:18be just 1% higher tonight suggests that the market wants to believe that Iran will not
00:23block the Straits of Hormuz, the 33km-wide passage through which 20% of the world's oil
00:29passes.
00:30Now, if that happens, the oil price would be expected to rise a lot more than it has.
00:35And according to a prediction betting market called Polymarket, the probability that Iran
00:39will do it has gone above 50%.
00:43But perhaps the main impact for markets of yesterday's events is that the taco trade is dead.
00:48It stands for Trump always chickens out, and for share traders it's been working quite
00:51well.
00:52They made money when he paused the tariffs on Canada and Mexico and then paused most of
00:56the ones he announced on April 2, lowered the tariffs on China and then paused those
01:00on the EU.
01:01But that was all about tariffs.
01:03Turns out that when it comes to bombs, he doesn't always chicken out.
01:07So most Asian markets fell today, apart from China, but not very much.
01:11And the local market fell too, also not much, less than 1%.
01:16So no sign of panic yet.
01:18The biggest falls today were mining companies and trans-urban because people tend to drive
01:22less when the price of fuel goes up.
01:24And the Aussie dollar is down a bit tonight at around 64 US cents.
01:28And that's finance.
01:29.
01:30.
01:31.
01:32.
01:33.
01:34.
01:35.
01:36.
01:37.
01:38.
01:39.

Recommended