Commodities April 28, 2026 08:34 PM

Oil Pulls Back From Three-Week Peak as UAE Quits OPEC and Hormuz Standoff Continues

Markets trim gains after Abu Dhabi announces departure from OPEC even as Strait of Hormuz remains closed and diplomacy stalls

By Avery Klein
Oil Pulls Back From Three-Week Peak as UAE Quits OPEC and Hormuz Standoff Continues

Oil prices eased from near three-week highs as traders weighed the United Arab Emirates' move to leave the OPEC producer group. The retreat was limited by ongoing uncertainties tied to the U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran and the continued closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which has disrupted a significant share of global supply.

Key Points

  • Brent futures fell 0.6% to $110.65/bbl and WTI fell 0.9% to $99.05/bbl after both surged over 3% to near three-week highs the prior day.
  • The UAE will leave OPEC effective on Friday, citing a focus on national interests, creating tensions with Saudi Arabia and raising questions about future production coordination.
  • The Strait of Hormuz remains closed, disrupting roughly 20% of global oil supplies and limiting near-term increases in seaborne output even if the UAE opts to raise production.

Oil slipped modestly on Wednesday after rallying to near three-week highs, as market participants assessed the implications of the United Arab Emirates' decision to exit the OPEC producer group. The prospective reduction in cartel cohesion tempered upside momentum, but supply-side fears kept losses in check.

Price moves - By 20:16 ET (00:16 GMT), Brent futures were down 0.6% at $110.65 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate futures declined 0.9% to $99.05 a barrel. Both contracts had climbed more than 3% on Tuesday to approach three-week peaks.

UAE departure from OPEC - The UAE said it will leave OPEC effective on Friday, citing a desire to concentrate on its national interests. The exit represents a notable setback for the producer group at a time when supplies are already under strain. The move places the UAE at odds with Saudi Arabia, which serves as the de facto leader of OPEC.

Observers expect the UAE to raise output over time, given its prior objections to OPEC production quotas. However, any meaningful increase in barrels flowing to market is likely to depend on the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, which currently constrains seaborne exports.

Strait of Hormuz and geopolitical friction - The Strait of Hormuz remains closed, maintaining a choke point that has disrupted roughly 20% of global oil supplies since late February. That closure has been a central factor behind the extended surge in crude prices. Reopening the channel appears unlikely in the near-term.

Efforts to restart transit through the strait and to reach a cessation of hostilities have so far faltered. Media reports earlier in the week indicated that Iran presented a fresh proposal aimed at reopening the strait and ending the war. The United States was reported to object to that plan because it involved postponing negotiations on Iran's nuclear program.

Meanwhile, U.S. forces have largely maintained a naval blockade of Iran, contributing to an impasse between the two governments.


Outlook - The combination of an OPEC member's imminent departure and a closed Hormuz keeps the market sensitive to any further geopolitical developments. Traders are balancing the prospect of eventual higher UAE production against the immediate constraint on exports through the strait and continued diplomatic uncertainty.

Risks

  • Continued closure of the Strait of Hormuz - sustains disruptions to seaborne oil exports and keeps upward pressure on prices; impacts global oil markets and energy supply chains.
  • Diplomatic impasse between the U.S. and Iran - stalled negotiations and a maintained U.S. naval blockade risk prolonging the disruption and uncertainty for crude flows and shipping.
  • Fragmentation within OPEC following the UAE's exit - could complicate coordinated production management and influence pricing dynamics for upstream producers and refiners.

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