Iran calls it off — for now; Aramco OSP cut exposes the real story

Iran calls it off — for now; Aramco OSP cut exposes the real story

Oil whipsaws on Iran pause; Aramco $6/bbl OSP cut signals demand destruction

Commodity Price Movement Recap
June 9, 2026 · 6:31 AM
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Monday's session began with oil up 4.5% on renewed Iran-Israel missile exchanges, then gave back most of it after Iran announced a conditional suspension of attacks by midday. That whipsaw told traders what they needed to know: the geopolitical risk premium is real but unstable, and the more durable signal was underneath it — Saudi Aramco's $6/bbl July OSP cut, the largest since the war began, confirming Asian demand destruction even as Hormuz stays shut. Gold, still sitting below the 200-day moving average it broke Friday, barely moved. Copper got modest relief from Section 232 tariff clarity. Corn snapped a six-session losing streak; soybeans didn't. 1

Settlement snapshot — June 8 vs. June 5

ContractSettlementChange% ChgJune 5 close
NYMEX WTI Jul (CLN6)$91.30/bbl+$0.76+0.84%$90.54
ICE Brent Aug (BZN6)$94.25/bbl+$1.16+1.25%$93.09
COMEX Gold Jun (GCM6)$4,335.90/oz−$1.20−0.03%$4,337.10
COMEX Silver Jul (SI00)$68.330/oz−$0.773−1.12%$69.103
COMEX Copper Jul (HGN6)~$6.3345/lb+~$0.050+~0.80%$6.2845
CBOT Corn Jul (ZCN6)418.75¢/bu+0.75¢+0.18%418.00¢
CBOT Soybeans Jul (ZSN6)1,115.75¢/bu−6.50¢−0.58%1,122.25¢
Sources: 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Note on copper: The Dow Jones Data Talk reported the HGM6 June expiry settling at $6.3295/lb (+1.05%). The active HGN6 July contract last traded at $6.3345/lb; MarketWatch's settlement field had not updated from the Friday close of $6.2845 at time of data capture. The ~0.80% gain figure uses the HGN6 last price vs. Friday settlement. 5

WTI CLN6 settled at $91.30/bbl, up $0.76 (+0.84%), ending a two-session losing streak. 2 The intraday range — $91.25 to $91.47 — tells you how quickly the session's drama compressed. At the open, after Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) launched ballistic missiles into northern Israel Saturday night and Israel struck Iranian military sites in retaliation, both grades spiked more than 4.5%. Brent briefly cleared $98. Then Iran's state news agency IRNA announced the IRGC was "suspending" its military operations against Israel — and both contracts shed most of the gain within hours. 1 ICE Brent Aug (BZN6) closed at $94.25/bbl, up $1.16 (+1.25%). 3
The suspension is conditional and reversible. The IRGC's statement explicitly warned that "any continuation of hostilities — particularly in southern Lebanon — will be met with far harsher and more devastating actions." 9 Trump posted on Truth Social calling for an immediate halt and said a peace deal was "close," while simultaneously confirming the US maritime blockade of Iran "will continue in full force." 9 Iran's chief negotiator, in a statement that contradicted the White House's optimism, said "the US is not seeking a ceasefire or dialogue." The cease-exchange is a pause, not a settlement.
Missile debris embedded in Israeli ground after weekend Iran strikes
Israeli residents near missile wreckage from Saturday's IRGC strike, June 8 10

Aramco's OSP cut: the demand signal markets needed to read carefully

The session's most informative number was not a futures settlement but a pricing document. Saudi Aramco set its July Arab Light official selling price (OSP) for Asia at Oman/Dubai plus $9.50/bbl — a cut of $6.00/bbl from June's $15.50/bbl premium. 11 That is the second consecutive large reduction; June had already come down $4 from the wartime record of $19.50. The full July OSP schedule:
GradeJuly OSP vs. Oman/Dubaivs. JuneChange
Arab Super Light+$11.15/bbl$17.15/bbl−$6.00
Arab Light+$9.50/bbl$15.50/bbl−$6.00
Arab Extra Light+$10.00/bbl(est. $16.00)−$6.00
Arab Medium+$7.75/bbl(est. $13.75)−$6.00
Source: 1
Dow Jones summarized the contradiction directly: "Top oil exporter Saudi Arabia sharply cut the price of its main oil grade for Asia as demand slows, even as the near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz continues to choke off supplies out of the Persian Gulf and tighten global markets." 1 The OSP cut says demand destruction in Asia is outpacing the tightness created by the Hormuz blockade. Facebook posts ahead of the announcement had claimed a $2.10/bbl increase; that rumor was wrong on both direction and magnitude. 12
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OPEC+ July quota: +188K b/d for the fourth consecutive month

The seven core OPEC+ nations — Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Algeria, Oman — agreed Sunday on a 188,000 b/d July production target increase, matching June's increment. 13 This is the fourth straight month of increases since the February 28 outbreak of war and the effective closure of the Strait. The statement retained language about "complete flexibility to increase, pause, or reverse" adjustments; the next meeting is July 5.
Rystad Energy analyst Jorge Leon put the quota decision in context: "The market is not short of quota announcements; it is short of physical barrels that can actually move. In that sense, the 188,000 barrels per day increase would be more of a policy signal than a real supply boost." 13 OPEC+ production overall in May was down roughly 9.6 million b/d from pre-war levels, with the three core Gulf members (Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait) running about 850,000 b/d below their combined quotas. 14
Leon also flagged the reopening risk: "When the Strait of Hormuz reopens, the market could move very quickly from fear of shortage to fear of surplus." 15 Fitch Ratings, which upgraded the oil and gas sector outlook from Neutral to Improving on Monday, models Brent at $100–$110 during June–July and then a drop to ~$70 by September, with the Hormuz closure assumed to last five months total (through end-July). 16

Hormuz and the inventory clock

The Strait of Hormuz remains commercially closed. The EU sanctioned the IRGC Navy and two Iranian individuals Monday over the Persian Gulf Strait Authority's toll system. 17 The US Navy disabled a seventh shadow-fleet tanker in the Gulf of Oman the same day. 18 Large listed shipping companies remain unable to engage with the PGSA: "Every financial transaction is closely monitored, and payments are usually conducted in US dollars. Falling under Ofac sanctions would carry significant consequences, including the freezing of assets and accounts," one shipping broker told Argus. 19
Cushing, Oklahoma crude stocks stood at 22.4 million barrels as of May 29, down roughly 4 million barrels from pre-war levels. Analysts at Energy Aspects have warned that inventories below 20 million barrels could trigger operational challenges for Cushing logistics. 20 Oxford Economics estimates OECD industrial inventories are drawing at 146 million barrels per month, with the technical minimum of 2,308 million barrels (52 days of forward demand) reachable by mid-September. 21 The US Strategic Petroleum Reserve fell to 357.1 million barrels, a two-year-plus low; the Energy Department says borrowing companies will repay an additional 40 million barrels as a premium after the war ends. 20
Yemen's Houthi forces announced a "complete ban" on Israeli-affiliated vessels in the Red Sea Monday, adding a second active maritime chokepoint to Hormuz. 22

Gold: holding, not recovering

COMEX gold June delivery (GCM6) settled at $4,335.90/oz, down $1.20 (−0.03%). 4 Spot gold traded near $4,327.50 late in the session, essentially flat. The intraday range was dramatic — an early drop toward $4,300 followed by a rebound to approximately $4,377 — but the session ended almost exactly where it started. That is not a recovery; it is stasis below the 200-day moving average (~$4,428), which gold broke definitively on Friday June 5 for the first time since November 2023. 23
Monday's session high (~$4,377) was approximately $51 below the 200-day and $10 below May's low near $4,367 — the next technical level Marc Chandler of Bannockburn Global Forex identified as "the next obvious technical level of interest." 24 Gold did not test the 200-day from below.
The macro backdrop remained adverse. The 10-year Treasury yield rose 3.1 basis points to 4.568%, with the 30-year reaching 5.043%. 25 DXY eased slightly to 99.99 but had briefly touched its highest level in nearly two months during the session. 26 President Trump, on NBC's Meet the Press Sunday, said "there's no reason to raise interest rates" and that hikes would "kill success," while adding Fed Chair Kevin Warsh should "do whatever he wants." 25 Warsh's first FOMC meeting is June 16–17.
The Kitco weekly gold survey (published Friday June 5, covering the week starting June 8) recorded 74% of Wall Street analysts bearish — from roughly three-quarters bullish the prior week. Retail participants were less negative: 47% bullish against 37% bearish in a 49-person poll. 24
Fawad Razaqzada of FOREX.com warned that a CPI surprise this week could push gold toward $4,000: "Given the current market structure, a move toward the psychologically important $4,000 level can no longer be ruled out." 27 Kevin Grady of Phoenix Futures and Options is watching for a test of the March 23 low at $4,128 first: "There's no reason we couldn't test that level. But the lower volumes and lower open interest are a double-edged sword" — algorithmic shorts pushing a thin market, not a mass liquidation. 24 August contract open interest stands at approximately 263,000 contracts — anemic by this year's standards.
Not everyone is in the bear camp. Jeff Sarti of Morton Wealth: "If you are underweight gold, then yes, nibbling a bit here makes sense, but more from a long-term perspective, we are sticking with our positioning." 27 The counterargument for bulls: the People's Bank of China added 9.95 tonnes in May — the 19th consecutive month of purchases — bringing total PBoC holdings to 2,331.52 tonnes. 28 But China's domestic gold market is showing strain: Shanghai Gold Exchange withdrawals in May totaled 63.5 tonnes, the lowest since February 2020, and 14 Chinese gold ETFs recorded combined net outflows exceeding RMB 10 billion (~$1.48 billion) over the past month. 28 Central bank buying and retail selling are running in opposite directions.
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Silver underperforms again

COMEX silver July (SI00) settled at $68.330/oz, down $0.773 (−1.12%), continuing a sharper five-day decline of −9.08%. 8 The one-month loss is −21.28% vs. gold's roughly −4–5% — silver's industrial and precious dual character amplified both the rate-repricing and the industrial demand concern. The gold-silver ratio held near 63.6, little changed from Friday's 63.4. 29

Copper: tariff clarity provides a floor

COMEX copper July (HGN6) last traded at $6.3345/lb Monday, up roughly $0.050 (+0.80%) from Friday's $6.2845 close, with an intraday range of $6.2335 to $6.3965 on volume of 47,180 contracts — 107% of the 65-day average. 30 Copper remains 4.74% below its June 2 all-time high of $6.6495/lb.
The modest gain coincided with the June 8 effective date for the second phase of Trump's Section 232 tariff amendment (signed April 2). Starting at 12:01 a.m. today: agricultural equipment (combines, harvesters) and residential HVAC systems saw their Section 232 tariff rate drop from 25% to 15%, with the reduction running through December 31, 2027. Mobile industrial equipment imported from trade-agreement partner countries also received the 15% rate. Copper derivatives were formally integrated into the Section 232 framework. 31 A critical structural feature of the proclamation: tariffs now apply to the full customs value of imported goods rather than only the embedded metal content — so a $200,000 piece of equipment with $40,000 of embedded steel now attracts duties on the entire $200,000. 32
The tariff clarity removed one active uncertainty that had contributed to Friday's 4.28% sell-off. LME copper, which was quoted at $13,621/tonne (~$6.178/lb) in midday DJ commentary, showed copper markets moving roughly in line globally. 1

Grains: corn breaks the streak, soybeans can't

CBOT settlements

CBOT Corn July (ZCN6) settled at 418.75¢/bu, up 0.75¢ (+0.18%) — ending six consecutive sessions of losses that had cost the contract more than 8% over two weeks. 33 The session tested patience — corn dropped to 412.50¢ early before recovering. Volume was 239,980 contracts, 116% of the 65-day average. 6
CBOT Soybeans July (ZSN6) settled at 1,115.75¢/bu, down 6.50¢ (−0.58%), the sixth straight loss and a four-month low. 33 Intraday range: 1,111.25¢ to 1,125.25¢. Volume was 124,840 contracts, 105% of average. 7
Austin Schroeder of Price Futures Group put the broader grain sell-off in context: "The longs that had been piling in on the previous crude strength, excellent exports, prospects of China buying, etc., all wanted out at the same time." 33 Joe Davis of Futures International offered a cautiously stabilizing read: "With the markets now oversold, fund liquidation probably slows. There is no bullish weather story... it remains bearish." 33 CFTC data for the week ending June 2 showed managed money cut soybean net longs by 33,502 contracts to 156,050; corn funds held a net short position of approximately 133,000 contracts. 34
Charlie Sernatinger of Marex offered a harder view: "We may not be at our bottom yet for the springtime price drop, but it feels to me as if the market is not yet done with doling out lessons to those engaged in 'groupthink.'" 33

USDA Crop Progress: corn steady, soybeans slip one point

The USDA NASS weekly Crop Progress report, released Monday at 3:04 p.m. CDT for the week ending June 7, showed:
CropPlanted5-yr avgEmergedG/E ratingPrior weekYr-ago
Corn97%96%86%67%67%71%
Soybeans92%88%79%65%66%68%
Winter wheat25%26%54%
Spring wheat98% planted52%47%
Source: 35
The corn G/E held steady at 67% but remains 4 percentage points below a year ago; the Very Poor/Poor share ticked up 1 point to 6%. Soybean G/E slipped 1 point to 65%, also 3 points below last year. Winter wheat at 25% G/E is running 29 percentage points below 2025, though the early harvest pace (11% complete vs. 4% last year) suggests some acreage has already been taken. Spring wheat bounced 5 points to 52% G/E, a meaningful improvement.
DTN agricultural meteorologist John Baranick framed the weather setup: "Normally, the heat would give us a little bit of concern. But it's coming with a lot of rainfall in many areas and will be followed by milder and continued showers next week. Overall, this is a pretty good setup for June." 35
Weekend rains were heaviest across northern Missouri and southern Iowa, with the Corn Belt broadly receiving more than an inch. StoneX's Mike Castle: "These rains came with some welcomed heat units as well, making much of the region feel like a greenhouse and providing a serious boost to developing corn and soybean crops." 33 Flood risk has elevated for Missouri and surrounding areas under the persistent El Niño-driven pattern; severe storm threats are forecast for the Dakotas Tuesday and the broader Midwest Wednesday through Thursday.

China: day 117 with no confirmed soybean purchases

China's zero-buy streak for US soybeans reached 117-plus days as of June 8, with DJ/Morningstar noting "indications of any additional export-purchasing from China remain absent." 33 USDA's daily export sales system logged 264,000 metric tons of soybeans sold to an "unknown destination" for the 2026/27 marketing year — but not to China. The prior week's export inspections (week ending June 4) were 398,000 metric tons, down 21.2% week-on-week and 28.8% from a year ago; cumulative 2025/26 soybean exports total 36.06 million metric tons, running 20.3% behind last year's pace.
USDA Deputy Secretary Stephen Vaden told the WSJ Global Food Forum (June 2–3) that China "has started placing orders" for the 2026 harvest, and said USDA expects China to fulfill a 25-million-metric-ton annual commitment. 36 That forward guidance is not showing up in USDA's daily sales system, which is where the market will ultimately look for confirmation.

New World Screwworm: three new Texas cases, federal adviser appointed

The New World Screwworm (NWS) outbreak in Texas escalated Monday: three additional cases were confirmed, all within the state, bringing the total to at least five since June 3. 33 USDA appointed John Bellinger — a Texas A&M University System board member — as senior adviser for NWS preparedness. USDA estimated potential Texas economic losses at $1.8 billion and has committed $100 million for research, trapping, and border patrol. 37 Live cattle imports from the US southern border have been halted since May 2025. August feeder cattle was not separately reported in Monday's grain data; StoneX's Morning Commodity Insight noted feeders "bucked the entire board, half a cent higher while everything around them sold." 38

Macro dashboard — June 8

IndicatorReadingChangeContext
DXY (US Dollar Index)99.99−0.08 ptsDay high 100.21 (near 2-month high); 52-week high 100.64
10Y Treasury yield4.568%+3.1 bpDay range 4.519%–4.585%; 52-week range 3.923%–4.690%
2Y Treasury yield4.166%+0.6 bp
30Y Treasury yield5.043%+4 bp approx.Bear steepening continues
1Y inflation expectations3.5%−0.1 pp vs. AprilNY Fed May SCE; 3Y 3.1%, 5Y 3.0% both unchanged
Nasdaq Composite25,929.66+0.86%Chip stocks led: Intel +11.2%, Micron +9.9%, KLA +9.3%
S&P 5007,405.73+0.30%
Dow Jones Industrial Avg50,786.01−0.16%Only major index in the red
VIX18.92−12.04%Down from Friday's 21.51; still above long-run avg
Sources: 25 26 39 29
The NY Fed's May Survey of Consumer Expectations, the sole scheduled macro release Monday, showed 1-year inflation expectations easing to 3.5% (from April's 3.6%) while 3-year and 5-year readings held at 3.1% and 3.0% respectively. 39 1-year home price expectations rose to 3.5% — the highest since July 2022. The share of respondents reporting their current finances as worse than a year ago hit its highest since January 2023. Those data points — stable headline inflation expectations, deteriorating household financial sentiment — are the context in which Wednesday's May CPI lands.

Catalysts ahead

Wednesday June 10 — May CPI (8:30 a.m. ET): The most important data point before the June 16–17 FOMC. MarketWatch headlined Monday: "Inflation could top 4% this week. The bond market wants Fed Chair Warsh to prove he'll fight it." Gold at $4,335 is priced to move on a hot print.
Thursday June 11 — USDA June WASDE + weekly export sales (noon ET): The monthly supply-demand estimates for corn, soybeans, and wheat. The weekly export sales report is the earliest point at which Chinese soybean purchases made after May 28 could appear in official data — either corroborating Vaden's confidence or extending the 117-day drought. StoneX technical levels going in: corn bulls need a close above 422.75¢; soybean bulls need a close above 1,130.00¢. 38
Monday June 16–17 — FOMC meeting: Warsh's debut rate decision. The NFP + possible CPI combination this week will determine whether the meeting's language tilts toward a hike signal or holds patient.
Cover: AI-generated illustration

References

  1. 1DJ Newswires via Morningstar: Oil Trims Gains After Iran Says It Ended Attacks on Israel — Commodities Roundup
  2. 2DJ Market Data via Morningstar: WTI settlement
  3. 3DJ Market Data via Morningstar: Brent settlement
  4. 4DJ Market Data via Morningstar: Gold settlement
  5. 5DJ Market Data via Morningstar: Copper settlement
  6. 6MarketWatch: C00 Corn Continuous Contract
  7. 7MarketWatch: S00 Soybeans Continuous Contract
  8. 8MarketWatch: SI00 Silver Continuous Contract
  9. 9Argus Media: Iran says suspends military operation against Israel
  10. 10Al Jazeera: Iran and Israel halt attacks but sabre-rattling continues
  11. 11Reuters: Saudi Arabia sharply cuts July OSP for Asia on slow demand
  12. 12EnergyNews.pro: Saudi Aramco Cuts Asian Crude Prices by $6 per Barrel for July
  13. 13Argus Media: OPEC+ 7 agrees to 188,000 b/d July target hike
  14. 14Argus Media: OPEC+ 7 agrees
  15. 15The Hindu/Reuters: OPEC+ to make small oil output quota hike for July
  16. 16bne IntelliNews: Fitch raises oil and gas sector outlook to improving
  17. 17gCaptain: EU Sanctions IRGC Navy Unit Over Strait of Hormuz Toll System
  18. 18gCaptain: US Forces Disable Sanctioned Shadow-Fleet Tanker
  19. 19Argus Media: US sanctions will limit shipper engagement with PGSA
  20. 20Sprague Energy: Oil Market Extends Losses on De-Escalation Hopes and Oman Port Update
  21. 21bne IntelliNews: Inventory drawdowns mask impact of Hormuz disruption
  22. 22gCaptain: Houthis to Impose Complete Ban on Israeli Ships in Red Sea
  23. 23Kitco News (Neils Christensen): What's next for gold after the 200-day moving average breaks?
  24. 24Kitco News (Ernest Hoffman): Wall Street brimming with bears after gold's breakdown
  25. 25CNBC: Treasury yields edge higher as traders weigh inflationary pressures
  26. 26MarketWatch: US Dollar Index (DXY) Overview
  27. 27Kitco News (Neils Christensen): Gold could test $4,000 support as inflation risks loom
  28. 28Kitco News (Ernest Hoffman): China increases gold reserves by 9.95 tonnes in May
  29. 29Kitco NewsWire: Gold holds near $4,330 as oil pares Iran-Israel risk premium — Kitco PM Report
  30. 30MarketWatch: HG00 Copper Continuous Contract
  31. 31Supply Chain Dive (Phil Neuffer): Trump further tweaks steel, aluminum, copper tariffs
  32. 32Discovery Alert (Muflih Hidayat): Trump's 2026 Steel, Aluminium & Copper Tariffs Proclamation Explained
  33. 33Dow Jones/Morningstar: Soybean Futures Slide as China Stays Quiet on Buying — Daily Grain Highlights
  34. 34Barchart/Austin Schroeder: Soybean Weakness Sliding to Monday
  35. 35DTN Progressive Farmer: Crop Progress — Corn 97% Planted, 67% Good to Excellent; Soybeans 92% Planted, 65% Good to Excellent
  36. 36Farm Policy News: China Placing New US Soybean Orders, USDA's Vaden Says
  37. 37The Texas Tribune: Screwworm is in Texas. Here is what to know.
  38. 38StoneX: Morning Commodity Insight — June 8, 2026
  39. 39Reuters/New York Fed: US public's inflation expectations largely unchanged in May

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