Oil prices swung from a two-day rally to a retreat Monday as Trump's ceasefire push collided with Israel's expanding ground operation in Lebanon.
Oil prices swung from a two-day rally to a retreat Monday as Trump's ceasefire push collided with Israel's expanding ground operation in Lebanon.

Brent crude fell toward $91 a barrel Monday after Donald Trump moved to broker a ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, paring the 2.3% gain from Friday's escalation that had pushed prices to a three-week high.
"The risk premium embedded in crude remains vulnerable to a rapid unwind if a ceasefire materializes, but the path to a deal is far from certain given the scale of the current ground operation," analysts at Goldman Sachs said in a note. The bank maintained its fourth-quarter Brent forecast at $90 a barrel and WTI at $83, describing the outlook as "two-sided."
Brent had surged $2.07, or 2.27%, to $93.19 a barrel on Monday, June 1, after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered troops to push deeper into Lebanon, saying he had "instructed the IDF to expand the maneuver." West Texas Intermediate rose $2.37, or 2.71%, to $89.73. The gains reversed Friday's declines of 1.8% for Brent and 1.7% for WTI, which had come on expectations that the U.S. and Iran were nearing a ceasefire extension.
The dueling narratives — escalation on the ground versus diplomatic off-ramp — leave crude caught between two forces. A ceasefire would remove the geopolitical risk premium that has kept Brent above $85 for most of the past month, potentially sending prices below Goldman's $90 target. But any breakdown in talks could push Brent toward $95, especially if the conflict disrupts supply routes near the Strait of Hormuz, through which about 20% of global oil passes.
The Israeli operation, which follows a ceasefire declared in April, marks the most significant ground incursion since the U.S.-brokered truce. Netanyahu's decision to expand the maneuver came despite ongoing diplomatic efforts, complicating Trump's bid to negotiate a new arrangement between Washington and Tehran. The U.S.-brokered Israeli-Lebanon talks in Washington on Friday had raised hopes of de-escalation before the prime minister's announcement.
Goldman's two-sided risk assessment captures the competing forces in oil markets. On the supply side, any escalation that threatens Iranian production or Gulf shipping lanes could quickly add $5 to $7 a barrel to crude prices. On the demand side, the bank estimated that weak April oil retail sales data from China and Western Europe together implied about 2 million barrels a day of downside risk to its already subdued demand forecasts. Chinese crude imports fell 3.2% year over year in April, while European diesel consumption declined as industrial activity slowed.
The cross-asset reaction reflected the uncertainty. The U.S. dollar index edged higher as investors sought safety, while gold held near $2,350 an ounce. Asian equity markets slipped broadly, with Japan's Nikkei 225 falling 0.8% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index dropping 1.2%. European stocks opened higher, buoyed by AI-related gains, but energy sector shares underperformed as the ceasefire news pressured crude.
The last time a major Middle East ceasefire collapsed — the April 2026 Israel-Lebanon truce — Brent crude spiked 4.2% in the following session as traders repriced supply risk. The current episode mirrors that pattern, with the key difference being the active involvement of a former U.S. president in ceasefire talks, which introduces a diplomatic variable that did not exist in April. Trump's track record of brokering the initial April ceasefire gives his current efforts some credibility with market participants, though the expanded scope of the current operation raises the stakes.
If Trump's mediation succeeds, Brent could test $85 a barrel, the level where it traded before the latest escalation. If talks fail and Israel deepens its push into Lebanon, Goldman's $90 forecast would likely prove too low, with Brent potentially testing $95 to $97 in the near term. The next 48 hours of diplomatic signals will be critical for direction, with traders watching for any statement from the White House or the Israeli prime minister's office.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.