Oil prices have slipped back to where they were before the Iran conflict erupted, giving households, businesses and policymakers a rare break from the energy shock that has dominated markets this month.
Brent crude dropped below $72.48 a barrel on Thursday, June 25, the level it traded at in late February before the conflict began. The fall came as Gulf flows picked up, easing fears that disrupted supply routes would keep fuel prices elevated.
The price move matters because oil feeds quickly into transport, shipping, aviation and food costs. When crude falls, the shift could affect petrol prices, freight bills and company margins, though the impact is not immediate and depends on refining costs, taxes and currency moves.
Markets are watching whether the decline lasts. A short fall in crude can calm inflation expectations, but a renewed disruption in Gulf flows would put pressure back on importers and central banks that are already balancing weak growth with the risk of higher prices.
For governments, cheaper oil offers some budget relief where fuel subsidies or energy support schemes are still in place. For investors, the drop changes the calculation for energy producers, airlines, transport companies and consumer stocks that had been trading around war-driven price risk.
The numbers told a different story from the panic that followed the first supply shock. Brent is no longer trading above its pre-conflict marker, but the market is still tied to a narrow question: whether Gulf flows keep moving.



