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U.S. 60-Day Iranian Oil Waiver Sends WTI to $73.60: Leverage Map for Crude CFDs, Energy Equities, and FX
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Основные выводы
- •A 50x long WTI CFD opened at $78.25 would face liquidation and margin deficit at current $73.60 prices — the -5.43% move exceeds margin buffer at leverage levels above ~18x.
- •The 60-day general license (not a case-by-case waiver) enables rapid Iranian supply ramp-up, amplifying the bearish crude signal beyond what a limited waiver would imply.
- •USD/CAD and USD/NOK face upside pressure as NOK and CAD weaken on sustained crude softness — oil-exporting FX is the key cross-market transmission channel.
- •Airlines (Delta, United, American) are structural beneficiaries of lower jet fuel costs; downstream refiners may also benefit if crack spreads widen on cheaper crude input.
- •August 21 license expiry is a hard binary catalyst — non-renewal or Strait of Hormuz incident could rapidly reverse the risk-premium compression and squeeze short positions.

According to reporting citing U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, the U.S. Treasury has issued a temporary 60-day general license authorizing the production, delivery, and sale of Iranian crude oil
Event Summary
According to reporting citing U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, the U.S. Treasury has issued a temporary 60-day general license authorizing the production, delivery, and sale of Iranian crude oil, petrochemical, and petroleum products through approximately August 21. The license covers associated banking, insurance, and transportation services — meaning major international buyers and shippers can participate with significantly reduced compliance friction. The authorization is explicitly tied to a broader U.S.–Iran peace framework, with Tehran committing to free transit through the Strait of Hormuz and IAEA nuclear inspections in exchange. As reported by sources tracking Treasury communications, the announcement immediately triggered a -5.43% move in WTI, with U.S. crude falling to approximately $73.60 (24h low: $73.33; 24h high: $78.25).
The Council on Foreign Relations characterizes the deal as "mostly a ceasefire," with both parties agreeing to lift maritime blockades through the Persian Gulf and spend the next 60 days resolving nuclear constraints and the full scope of sanctions relief. Critically, a general license — unlike case-by-case waivers — allows rapid ramp-up of trade volumes operationally, amplifying the near-term supply signal.
Leverage Impact Analysis
The -5.43% daily move in WTI Light Crude Oil creates severe pressure on leveraged long positions opened near the prior session's high of $78.25.
Scenario — 50x long WTI CFD opened at $78.25: A trader using 50x leverage on a $1,000 margin position controls $50,000 notional. A move from $78.25 to $73.60 represents a -5.94% adverse move, translating to approximately -297% of margin — a full liquidation and margin deficit event. Even at 20x leverage, the same $78.25 entry would see margin erased at roughly $75.35 (a ~3.7% drawdown), already breached during today's session.
Short-side opportunity: Traders holding short WTI CFD positions at 20x leverage opened near $78.25 are currently realizing approximately +118% return on margin at current $73.60 prices. The next key downside catalyst is whether major buyers (China, India, EU refiners) confirm large-scale contracted Iranian cargoes — confirmation of which could pressure Brent Crude Oil toward the $72–71 range.
Critical event risk: The 60-day license expiry around August 21 creates a hard binary catalyst. Funding rates and open interest on crude derivatives should be monitored closely — check live positioning on CoinUnited.io for real-time confirmation signals.
Cross-Market Impact
Energy equities: Exxon Mobil Corporation and Chevron Corporation face mild negative pressure from lower realized crude prices; pure-play E&Ps and high-cost U.S. shale operators are more exposed to 2–5% daily moves. Downstream refiners are relative beneficiaries if product prices don't fully adjust — watch crack spread behavior as a pair-trade signal. This fits the broader Iran De-escalation Energy Trade Pivot theme reshaping energy sector positioning.
Forex: Oil-exporting currencies face headwinds — USD/CAD and USD/NOK (see US Dollar / Norwegian Krone) should see NOK and CAD weaken on sustained crude softness. Oil-importing currencies (JPY, INR, EM Asia) benefit via improved trade balance dynamics.
Airlines: Lower jet fuel input costs are structurally positive for Delta Air Lines, Inc. and peers — a 5%+ crude decline meaningfully compresses fuel hedging costs.
Inflation/rates: The supply-side disinflationary impulse gives modest additional room for less-hawkish central bank posture in energy-importing economies, with potential downward pressure on inflation breakevens. See the Hormuz Strait & Energy Markets: A Trader's Guide for the structural framework.
Trading Considerations
WTI is now trading at $73.60 with the 24h low at $73.33 acting as immediate support. A confirmed break below $73.33 opens a volume profile void toward the $71–72 zone if major buyers validate Iranian cargo flows. Resistance reverts to the $75.30–$76 area (prior Trump-Iran deal levels from June 16).
Key risks to the bearish thesis: license non-renewal, IAEA inspection breakdowns, or any Strait of Hormuz incident before August 21 could rapidly rebuild the geopolitical risk premium. Traders should size positions conservatively given the binary August 21 expiry catalyst and monitor the Cross-Border Sanctions & Oil Markets guide for sanctions reversal scenarios.
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Часто задаваемые вопросы
At $73.60, the move from $78.25 is approximately -5.94%. Any long position using more than ~16-17x leverage opened at $78.25 would face liquidation before reaching today's low of $73.33 — at 50x, the margin deficit is catastrophic.
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