Oil plunging 20% on Iran ceasefire hopes — ride the energy sell-off
Oil prices have crashed 20% from their 2026 highs because the U.S. and Iran appear close to a ceasefire deal that could reopen the Strait of Hormuz — the narrow channel through which roughly a fifth of the world's oil flows.
Idea
Oil spiked earlier this year when the Iran war shut down the Strait of Hormuz, choking off a huge share of global supply. Now ceasefire talks are progressing fast, and traders are pricing in the possibility that oil starts flowing freely again. A 20% drop in just weeks shows how quickly sentiment has reversed — and if a deal is actually signed, there's likely more downside ahead because the original supply shock premium will fully unwind. Energy stocks like those in XLE tend to follow crude prices closely, so they offer a cleaner way to play the oil slide without dealing with futures contracts.