
Oil Crashes 2.4%, Dollar Reverses as Trump Delays Iran Strike – Markets Price in Geopolitical Relief
Brent crude plunges to $109.43 as President postpones Tuesday military action following Gulf allies' appeal; Treasury yields retreat from 1-year highs

President Donald Trump announced Monday he is postponing a planned military strike on Iran scheduled for Tuesday, sending oil prices tumbling 2.4% and triggering a sharp reversal in safe-haven flows. The surprise decision came after appeals from Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Qatar leaders amid ongoing negotiations with Tehran.
Global financial markets experienced a dramatic reversal on Monday, May 19, as President Donald Trump announced he would postpone a planned military strike on Iran that was scheduled for Tuesday. The surprise decision, made following direct appeals from Persian Gulf allies, triggered a sharp selloff in crude oil and unwound safe-haven positioning that had dominated markets for weeks.
Oil Prices Plunge on Strike Delay
International benchmark Brent crude dropped 2.4% to $109.43 per barrel during Monday's session after settling at $112.10 on Friday. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) futures fell 0.91% to $103.43 per barrel as traders rapidly repriced the geopolitical risk premium that had driven energy markets to multi-year highs.
President Trump announced the delay via social media on Monday afternoon, stating that "serious negotiations are now taking place" with Tehran. The decision came after direct requests from leaders in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar, who urged the administration to allow ongoing diplomatic efforts to continue.
"Sentiment stabilised after reports that the U.S. President had called off a planned strike on Iran following appeals from Persian Gulf leaders," Westpac analysts wrote in a research note published Monday evening.
The announcement marks a significant shift from the hawkish rhetoric that had dominated markets since the Strait of Hormuz closure earlier this year. Oil prices had surged more than 50% from pre-conflict levels as traders priced in the risk of extended supply disruptions from the world's most critical energy chokepoint.
Dollar Retreats, Treasury Yields Fall
The US Dollar Index ($DXY) pulled back to 99.07 on Monday after hitting multi-week highs above 99.27 earlier in the session. The greenback had rallied sharply in recent days as a safe-haven asset amid escalating Middle East tensions and a global bond market selloff.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury bond retreated 3 basis points to 4.591%, pulling back from its highest level in more than a year. The decline in yields came as fears of a lasting surge in inflation from elevated energy prices began to ease.
Against major currencies, the dollar's retreat was broadly felt. EUR/USD stabilized near 1.1733 after declining toward five-week lows last week, while GBP/USD held around 1.3517. The Japanese yen remained under pressure at 158.58 per dollar, though intervention speculation from Japanese authorities has intensified as the pair approaches critical levels. Traders watching USD/JPY noted that the 300-basis-point interest rate differential between the US and Japan continues to weigh on the yen despite reduced geopolitical tensions.
IEA Warns of Critical Inventory Depletion
The market relief came against a backdrop of increasingly dire warnings from energy officials. Fatih Birol, head of the International Energy Agency (IEA), told reporters on Monday at the Group of Seven finance leaders meeting in Paris that commercial oil inventories are "depleting rapidly" and the world only has a few weeks' worth of oil reserves left due to the Strait of Hormuz closure.
According to preliminary IEA data, global oil stockpiles fell by 129 million barrels in March and by a further 117 million barrels in April following US and Israeli strikes on Iran and the subsequent disruption to Gulf exports. The sharpest declines were recorded in OECD countries, where on-land inventories dropped by 146 million barrels.
"Cumulative crude supply losses from Gulf producers have now exceeded one billion barrels, with more than 14 million barrels a day unable to leave the region," the IEA stated in its recent report. The agency added that "with global oil inventories already drawing at a record clip, further price volatility appears likely ahead of the peak summer demand period."
Market Implications and What Comes Next
The postponement announcement raises critical questions about the durability of the current relief rally. While markets quickly unwound the immediate war premium in crude oil and safe-haven assets, the underlying geopolitical and supply fundamentals remain deeply challenged.
Key levels traders are monitoring include the $105 level for WTI crude – a break below would signal further technical weakness and potentially accelerate the unwinding of long positioning. On the dollar side, the 99.00 level on the DXY has emerged as critical support, with a sustained break potentially triggering a deeper correction.
For EUR/USD, traders are watching whether the pair can reclaim 1.1800 as questions about European Central Bank policy divergence from the Federal Reserve remain in focus. Similarly, GBP/USD faces resistance near 1.3600 as UK economic data continues to reflect the impact of elevated energy costs.
The broader market narrative now hinges on whether diplomatic negotiations can produce a lasting agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Any renewed escalation would likely see a violent snapback in oil prices and safe-haven flows, while a genuine breakthrough could trigger a much deeper correction in the energy complex.
With the FOMC minutes from April's meeting due for release on Wednesday, May 21, traders will also parse the Federal Reserve's thinking on how persistent energy-driven inflation might impact the path of monetary policy. The minutes are expected to reveal the rationale behind the historic four dissents at last month's meeting, providing insight into whether incoming Fed Chair Kevin Warsh faces renewed pressure to consider rate hikes later this year.
Trading Strategy: Fade the Relief or Wait for Confirmation?
For active forex traders, the current environment demands extreme caution. The postponement announcement created a one-day headline-driven move, but the fundamental picture remains clouded by uncertainty over whether negotiations will succeed.
Conservative traders may prefer to wait for clearer confirmation of a diplomatic breakthrough before establishing directional positions. Aggressive traders who believe the strike delay signals genuine progress toward a resolution might consider fading dollar strength on rallies back toward 99.50, with tight stops above 100.00.
On the oil front, short-term mean reversion trades targeting a move back toward $112 on Brent could be viable if diplomatic talks falter, though the risk-reward setup favors waiting for clearer price action signals before committing capital.
Above all, traders should be prepared for continued two-way volatility as markets oscillate between geopolitical headlines and underlying supply fundamentals. Position sizing discipline and careful use of stop-loss orders remain essential in this environment.

Jesus Guzman
Founder & Lead Analyst
Jesus is the founder of FN Pulse and a veteran trader with over 15 years of experience in financial markets. He specializes in quantitative analysis and is passionate about bringing transparency and data-driven insights to the retail trading industry.