Energy shares fell across the board on Wednesday as crude oil benchmarks experienced steep losses, sending the S&P 500 energy index to a 2.45% drop for the day.
Brent crude futures fell 4.3% to $73.76 per barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate slid 4.13% to $70.19 per barrel. Overall, oil prices declined by more than $3, reaching their weakest levels since before the start of the Iran war.
Market participants pointed to emerging signs that a greater number of oil tankers are set to move out of the Strait of Hormuz as a contributing factor to the price retreat. That shift in tanker movement coincided with broad selling in the energy sector on the equity markets.
Among the largest integrated producers, Exxon Mobil and Chevron posted declines of 1.9% and 1.8%, respectively. Independent and exploration-focused names were among the leading percentage losers in the sector: Liberty Energy, APA Corp, SM Energy, Devon Energy and Occidental Petroleum fell within a range of roughly 1.8% to 4.2%.
Service companies that support drilling and production activity also moved lower. Halliburton slid 2% and SLB declined 2.3%, reflecting pressure that extended beyond producers to the broader oilfield supply chain.
Refining companies recorded moderating losses as well, with Phillips 66 down about 1.6% and Marathon Petroleum off roughly 2% on the day.
This market reaction combined losses across multiple segments of the energy complex - integrated majors, independents, service providers and refiners - tied to the drop in benchmark crude prices and reported tanker movements through a key shipping chokepoint.
Given the concurrent declines in both prices and a broad set of energy equities, the trading session reflected immediate market sensitivity to developments affecting physical oil flows.