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Global oil prices eased on June 4 after Israel and Lebanon announced an agreement to implement a ceasefire, reducing near-term regional escalation risk and boosting hopes for a broader U.S.-Iran de-escalation that could reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
Brent futures were down about 0.89% at $96.92 a barrel and U.S. West Texas Intermediate fell roughly 0.81% to $95.24 by 0458 GMT. Markets had earlier jumped following renewed Middle East hostilities, including Iranian strikes on Kuwait and U.S. military action near the Strait.
Analysts warned the détente remains fragile: the truce is reported to be conditional on Hezbollah ceasing hostilities and broader U.S.-Iran negotiations are ongoing.
Supply-side concerns persist after U.S. crude inventories unexpectedly dropped by 8 million barrels to 433.7 million for the week to May 29, and the IEA cautioned that global stocks could reach critically low levels ahead of peak summer demand.
Energy consultancy ING noted inventories are likely to tighten into the third quarter, leaving upside risk to prices even if flows through Hormuz resume slowly.





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