CNBC56%
Oil prices rise as U.S. and Iran fight for control of Strait of Hormuz 43%
By Spencer Kimball54%
7/12/2026, 10:07:32 PM
BS Summary: This article contains 8 faulty reasoning types, including Negativity Bias, Post Hoc (False Cause), and In-Group Bias, with Framing Effect as the most egregious example at 30.6% saturation with 132 hits. Analysis detected 311 faulty-reasoning hits from 432 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 47.1% and a BS Rank of 43% (8,591 of 14,928 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 57.50% of the article peer group.
Oil prices rose Sunday evening after the U.S. and Iran traded strikes as they contest control of the Strait of Hormuz, one of the most important trade routes for global energy supplies.
U.S. crude oil futures were up 3.4% to $73.87 per barrel by 6:03 p.m.
ET.
Brent futures, the international benchmark, traded 3.5% higher at $78.67.
The U.S. military launched another wave of strikes Sunday against Iran after hitting 140 targets on Saturday, according to U.S.
Central Command .
The strikes are in response to an attack by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps on a container ship transiting Hormuz.
Iran responded Sunday with strikes on U.S. military facilities in Jordan, Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman, according to the state news agency Tasnim .
Iranian state media said the Revolutionary Guard had closed the Hormuz until further notice, but the U.S. military disputed that claim.
Centcom said the strait was open to "all vessels seeking to lawfully transit."
"U.S. forces are positioned and prepared to ensure that freedom of navigation remains available despite unwarranted Iranian aggression, harassment, threats, and arbitrary declarations," Centcom said in a social media post Sunday.
"Iran does not control the strait.
Traffic is flowing."
President Donald Trump said Hormuz was open in an interview with NBC News' "Meet the Press" that aired Sunday.
The maritime intelligence firm Windward tracked nine ships that transited the strait on Saturday.
The southern route through Oman's waters remains open to inbound and outbound traffic, said the Joint Maritime Information Center, a U.S.-led naval coalition in Bahrain that provides security updates to civilian ships transiting waters in the Middle East.
But the security situation in Hormuz remains severe, the center said in a notice on Sunday.
Mariners should exercise "extreme vigilance," it said.
The weekend airstrikes are the fourth time the U.S. has bombed Iran over the past week in retaliation for attacks on commercial ships transiting Hormuz in the southern corridor protected by the U.S. military.
Iran is demanding ships use a northern route through its territorial waters as it claims control of the strait.
The latest outbreak of fighting stems from conflicting U.S. and Iranian interpretations of how Hormuz was supposed to reopen under an interim peace deal they signed on June 17.
About 20% of the world's oil supplies transited Hormuz before the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran on Feb.
28.
Traffic plunged after Iran started attacking ships in the strait in early March, but transits had picked up after Washington and Tehran signed the interim deal.
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