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Citigroup Sees Brent Crude Falling to $60 by Year-End — The Hormuz Shock Is Fading and Fundamentals Are Taking Back Control

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2026-07-03 12:26:17
Citigroup has lowered its oil price forecast for the year, projecting Brent crude will fall to approximately $60 per barrel by year-end as the geopolitical supply shock from the US-Iran conflict rapidly subsides and supply-demand fundamentals reassert dominance over market pricing. The bank recommends selling opportunistically into summer rebounds with a $60-$65 target range — a forecast that, if correct, carries significant implications for inflation, Federal Reserve policy, and Bitcoin's macro recovery thesis.
The Fundamental Picture Behind Citi's Call
Citigroup analysts including Francesco Martoccia outlined four specific conditions driving the forecast revision. Hormuz shipping flows are returning to normal following the interim peace deal and the resumption of Qatar talks — the physical reopening of the strait is translating into actual tanker traffic normalization rather than remaining a headline without commodity market impact. Major crude buyers remain absent from the market, suggesting demand has not recovered alongside the supply normalization. The physical crude oil market is weakening significantly, with spot prices and physical differentials reflecting oversupply conditions that paper market pricing has not fully captured. And inventory declines are running far below expectations — the supply shock that was supposed to drain global oil stockpiles has not materialized at the scale that justified peak pricing above $90 per barrel during the conflict's most acute phase.
"With the Hormuz disturbance fading, fundamentals are rapidly regaining dominance," the Citi team wrote — a framing that explicitly separates the geopolitical premium that drove Brent from approximately $70 to above $92 during the conflict from the underlying supply-demand balance that will govern pricing once that premium fully dissipates.
The Inflation Mechanism That Makes This Consequential for Crypto
Citigroup's $60 year-end Brent forecast is not just an oil market call — it is a macro inflation call with direct implications for Federal Reserve policy and therefore for Bitcoin. The entire thesis that Standard Chartered's Geoffrey Kendrick and others built around the US-Iran peace deal as a crypto recovery catalyst rested on a specific chain: Hormuz reopening → oil declining toward pre-war levels → energy-driven CPI decelerating → Fed rate hike pressure easing → Bitcoin ETF outflows reversing → price recovery.
Brent crude at $60 by year-end — down from above $92 at the conflict's peak and well below the $70-$77 range where it has been trading this week — would represent the most dramatic energy deflationary impulse in the US inflation picture since the post-COVID commodity unwind. June's nonfarm payrolls shock at 57,000 already pushed Fed rate-hike probability from 65% to 50% for September. An oil price trajectory toward $60 through H2 2026 would provide the sustained headline inflation deceleration that the Reuters poll consensus of no cuts through 2027 did not account for — potentially forcing a significant revision to the rate path the Fed has signaled.
The Trading Recommendation and Its Timing
Citi recommends selling into summer rebounds within the $60-$65 target range rather than buying at current levels. This is a tactically important framing: the bank is not projecting an immediate crash from current $70-$75 Brent levels to $60, but a gradual grinding decline through the second half of 2026 as the Hormuz premium fades month by month. Summer seasonal demand — the period of peak driving and air conditioning energy use in the northern hemisphere — may provide brief price support that Citi characterizes as selling opportunities rather than trend reversals.
The $60-$65 target range aligns with the pre-conflict Brent pricing that existed before the February 28 outbreak of the US-Iran military exchange — suggesting Citi's base case is essentially a full normalization to pre-war fundamentals rather than a structural oil bear market driven by demand destruction or major new supply sources.
What to Watch as the Hormuz Premium Continues Fading
The key variables that will determine whether Citi's $60 year-end target materializes are the durability of the Qatar peace talk process — fresh US strikes on June 27 following the Ever Lovely ship attack showed the ceasefire remains fragile — and whether major crude buyers return to the market as supply normalizes. If Qatar talks produce a durable agreement and buyer demand stays subdued, Citi's $60 forecast becomes the most important single macro variable for the Federal Reserve's H2 inflation outlook, for the dollar's continued strength, and for whether Bitcoin's crowded short positioning in SOFR markets finally unwinds in the direction that supports a recovery above the 200-week SMA at $62,660.
Disclaimer:
1. The information provided does not constitute investment advice. Investors should make independent decisions and bear all risks themselves.
2. The copyright of this content belongs to the original author. The views expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not represent the stance or position of this website.
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