Traders place large $950 million bet on oil price falling hours ahead of ceasefire

Just as the US and Iran reached a crucial ceasefire, investors took a colossal leap into the market with a $950 million bet against rising oil prices. This gamble follows a notable trend of large trades in recent weeks.

Traders place large $950 million bet on oil price falling hours ahead of ceasefire
Investors placed an approximately $950 million bet on oil prices falling just hours before the U.S. and Iran announced a ceasefire, the latest large wager on the direction of ‌the world's ⁠most traded ⁠commodity ahead of a major policy announcement by President Donald Trump.

On Tuesday, investors sold a combined 8,600 lots of ​Brent and U.S. crude futures at 1945 GMT, according to LSEG data. At around 2230 GMT on Tuesday, Trump ​stepped back from threatening the destruction of "a whole civilization" and announced a two-week ceasefire with Iran, knocking crude futures down by some 15% to below $100 a barrel at the start of Wednesday's official ​trading session.

Taking large positions on oil prices rising or falling ⁠is not unusual ‌as traders use them to hedge large volumes of physical oil trade.


But ​such deals ​are very rarely done in big lots, as traders prefer to use sweeping ⁠orders across many exchanges and ask brokers to use algorithmic trading ​over many hours to execute the order to avoid impacting prices ​with their bets. Large orders also are seldom executed after settlement, which happens Monday to Friday at 1830 GMT. The bet follows similar moves on March 23, when investors sold $500 million in oil futures just 15 minutes before an announcement by Trump that he would delay attacks on Iran's energy infrastructure, which stunned markets and then triggered a 15% drop in the crude price. In Tuesday's ‌trading, some 6,200 lots of Brent futures changed hands at 1945 GMT, roughly 1% of the total volume traded in the day's regular session, while some ​2,400 lots ​of WTI futures traded at this ⁠time, also equal to around 1% of that day's regular volume.

CME Group declined to comment. ICE did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Trading volumes and volatility have exploded since ​the start of the war. On average, in the three years leading up to the war, some 300,000 lots of Brent crude futures would change hands on a daily basis.
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That amount has doubled in the last four weeks as daily volumes have hit record highs above 1 million lots, equal to a billion barrels of oil.
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