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What The U.S.-Iran MOU Really Means For Your Grocery Bill
Phil Lempert · 2026-06-19 · via Forbes - Business
Female customer doing grocery shopping at supermarket and feeling confused by bill

Woman looks shocked at a paper check in a grocery supermarket price increase and inflation. Upset woman in a supermarket viewing receipts looking at her shopping receipt and shocked about the price

getty

Well, it finally happened. After 111 days of war, a closed Strait of Hormuz, and grocery bills that have made every American wince at the checkout line, the United States and Iran signed a 14-point Memorandum of Understanding on June 17th at the Palace of Versailles. There are the headlines. The stock markets celebrate. And at the same time, every shopper in America is asking the same question: when does my grocery bill go down?

I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but if you're expecting a dramatic price reduction at the supermarket checkout before Labor Day, it isn’t going to happen!

What The MOU Actually Says, And What It Doesn't

The 14-point MOU is essentially a detailed ceasefire blueprint, not a peace treaty. Here are the provisions that matter most to anyone buying food or fuel in America:

Point 4 commits the U.S. to begin removing its naval blockade immediately, with full removal within 30 days. Point 5 requires Iran to facilitate safe, toll-free passage of commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz for 60 days but there is a crucial caveat. Iran must also clear mines and remove "technical and military obstacles," which could take the full 30 days according to the MOU. Point 10 directs the U.S. Treasury to issue immediate waivers for Iranian crude oil exports. Point 11 promises to unfreeze Iranian assets estimated at between $124 billion and $167 billion.

Here's what the MOU doesn't say: it contains no binding commitment to bring food prices down. No timeline for supply chain recovery. No grocery-specific relief provisions. As you might expect, the word "food" does not appear in the document.

The Key Takeaways For Prices

The single most important economic provision for American consumers is the reopening of the Strait. Roughly 20% of the world's oil supply has been effectively strangled since March 4th. Gas prices rose 93 cents per gallon since the war began. Brent crude surged past $120 per barrel at peak. The good news: maritime intelligence firm TankerTrackers has already confirmed Iran exported 3.8 million barrels of crude through the Strait this week which is the first meaningful flow since the conflict began.

The sanctions waiver in Point 10 is consequential. Iran could potentially ramp production to roughly 2 million barrels per day which is about one-third higher than pre-conflict levels, according to Rystad Energy. More supply means lower prices. Lower oil prices eventually mean lower transportation costs. And lower transportation costs eventually will have the effect of lowering prices on the supermarket shelves.

But here's where I want every consumer to pay close attention to this word: eventually.

Why Price Drops Will Take Time

I've spent more than three decades tracking how commodity shocks move through grocery supply chains. The physics here are unforgiving, and the MOU doesn't change them.

First reality: de-mining takes time. Iran must physically clear mines from the Strait. The MOU gives them up to 30 days. Until shipping lanes are certified safe, vessel traffic will be limited, insurance premiums for ships transiting the region will remain sky-high, and costs stay elevated.

Second reality: supply chains don't snap back like rubber bands. Purdue University's Center for Commercial Agriculture put it plainly: an energy shock like this one typically takes "three to six months to fully propagate to retail shelf prices - and for some products, longer." Grocery retailers operate on category management cycles that reset prices quarterly or even annually. The cost locks that major food manufacturers signed months ago haven't expired. Walmart isn't going to reprice the entire store because crude fell $10 a barrel this week. And I’m concerned that whomever the grocery retailer is, they might not be in hurry to lower prices as the future is still uncertain.

Third reality: the fertilizer time bomb. This is the story I'm most concerned about. Roughly 30% of the world's fertilizer passed through the Strait of Hormuz before the war. That supply was severed during spring planting season in the Northern Hemisphere which is the most critical window of the agricultural calendar. As CSIS warned, "sustained high fertilizer prices could affect agricultural production during Southern Hemisphere countries' planting season in late 2026, and even for the 2027 spring planting season in the Northern Hemisphere." American Farm Bureau Federation President Zippy Duvall stated plainly, "When farmers cut back on planted acres and their fertilizer use, it obviously reduces their yields." That’s just a scientific fact. We won't see that at the checkout today, but I guarantee we will see the impact, and prices rise, in the fall and into next year.

Fourth reality: let’s remember this deal is still a framework, not a final agreement. The MOU explicitly moves the hardest issues: sanctions relief details, nuclear verification, and asset release procedures into a 60-day negotiating window, extendable by mutual consent. A senior U.S. official acknowledged that "either side can walk away at any time" until a "fulsome binding deal" is signed. Until a final deal is inked and verified, expect continued caution from the global shipping industry which means continued pressure on freight costs.

Rabobank has gone further, predicting that war-related food price inflation could peak sometime next year in Europe.

Two Big Grocery Concerns to Consider

In my opinion there are three situations on this agreement that retailers and food industry executives need to watch carefully.

The SNAP Timing Trap. Nobody in the mainstream coverage is connecting two dots that have enormous implications for grocery retailers. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act mandated historic reductions in SNAP funding which striped benefits from millions of Americans at the same moment that food prices are still rising. Numerator identified Walmart, Dollar General, Dollar Tree, Winco Foods and other value-priced retailers as more vulnerable to SNAP benefit declines. For example, Walmart captures over 24% of SNAP shoppers' grocery dollars annually and 96.9% of SNAP participants purchased groceries from Walmart in the past year. Supermarkets that depend on SNAP redemptions for a significant share of their revenue are going to face a double squeeze: higher operational costs from the war's inflation ripple, and lower consumer spending from SNAP cuts. Needless to say, MOU doesn't fix either of those.

The Consumer Fatigue Factor. James Walton, chief economist at the UK's Institute of Grocery Distribution, told Bloomberg something that should wake up every retailer: "It's multiple years, one after another, with no relief and no sign of food prices going backwards. There are a lot of shoppers out there who basically just feel they've done everything now. They've taken all of the steps they can reasonably take, and now they've got their backs against the wall." This is the emotional state of the American shopper right now. Shoppers are exhausted. The MOU is geopolitically significant. But to the shopper standing in the cereal aisle deciding between name brand and private label? Or finding some other food to replace it? It changes nothing. This is the perfect time for retailers to communicate empathy and value in this moment.

What To Watch For

For retailers and consumers tracking when price relief might arrive, here are some actual milestones that matter more than today's press conference.

The MOU signed at Versailles this week is a great first step. Ending active hostilities, reopening the world's most important energy chokepoint, and setting Iran and the U.S. on a diplomatic path is a big deal. The IEA called the Hormuz closure "the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market." Getting it back open does matter for the global economy.

I've been watching how commodity shocks move through the food system since before some of today's store managers were born. Prices go up fast and come down slow. Supply chains heal in months, not days. And the American shopper has been absorbing body blow after body blow: Covid, tariffs, post-pandemic inflation, drought, and now war.

Grocery retailers’ job right now is not to wait for Washington to fix your customers' grocery bills. Your job is to find every possible way to demonstrate value today because today is when your shoppers need it most.