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Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian refineries have created physical shortages of diesel and fuel oil. This props up product prices, even as the broader crude oil market, influenced by financial trading, sees prices fall. This highlights how localized physical disruptions can override global sentiment trends.
Asian refineries, facing a potential cutoff of crude from the Strait of Hormuz, are reducing processing rates to prolong operations. This immediate reduction in the supply of refined products like jet fuel causes their prices to spike before the full impact of the crude oil shortage is felt globally.
While crude oil shocks dominate headlines, the most acute economic pain stems from shortages of specific, less-substitutable refined products like jet fuel or petrochemical feedstocks. These targeted shortages can cripple specific industries like aviation and plastics much faster than a general rise in crude prices.
Financial futures like Brent and WTI are lagging indicators of the current oil crisis. Physical markets, which reflect immediate supply-demand, are already showing extreme stress with prices like Oman crude over $180 and Singapore jet fuel over $200. These physical prices are a leading indicator of where futures are headed if the crisis persists.
A massive dislocation exists between financial markets and physical reality. While Brent futures trade near $100, physical cargoes are trading at $130-$150, with some delivered barrels hitting $286. This indicates extreme, localized scarcity that has not been priced into the broader financial markets yet.
The primary economic risk from an energy crisis is not just high prices, which dampen activity. A more severe threat is a "volume shock"—physical shortages and supply chain disruptions that can completely stop economic activity, affecting manufacturing inputs beyond just fuel.
Current market stress isn't traditional demand destruction from high prices or a recession. It's a third, rarer type: physical unavailability. Supply chain lags mean barrels aren't where they need to be, causing localized shortages misinterpreted as a drop in consumer demand.
Media focuses on crude benchmarks like Brent, but the real market stress appears in refined products like diesel and jet fuel. These prices reflect refinery disruptions and consumer demand directly, and can reach unprecedented levels even if crude oil itself has not.
While headline Brent crude reacts slowly to a supply shock, prices for physically delivered products like jet and bunker fuel in key regions skyrocket. These niche prices are the true leading indicators of underlying market stress and physical shortages, offering a more accurate view than commonly cited futures prices.
The most acute economic strain from the energy crisis is visible in refined products, not just crude oil. Soaring diesel and jet fuel prices are the immediate choke points, directly slowing freight, disrupting travel, and forcing airlines to cut routes, demonstrating a tangible impact on the real economy.
Despite a massive physical interruption in oil supply (10-15% of global trade), the price reaction in futures markets has been surprisingly small. This is because markets are balancing the immediate shortage against the potential for a well-supplied market in the future if geopolitical tensions ease.