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The Iran crisis has caused the largest physical logistics disruption in the history of the modern oil market. However, it has not led to the largest price dislocation. This disconnect highlights the market's initial belief that the disruption would be short-lived, a view that is now being tested.

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Every 10 days the Strait of Hormuz is closed, a 200-million-barrel physical gap is created in the global oil flow. This is not a temporary kink but a massive hole in the supply chain that will take months to resolve and normalize, even long after transit resumes.

A dangerous disconnect exists between oil futures prices, which seem muted, and the physical market. Experts warn of a catastrophic global supply shortage if the Strait of Hormuz remains closed, highlighting a significant tail risk that financial markets are currently underpricing.

The war in Iran is choking the Strait of Hormuz, which handles 20% of global oil. This disruption impacts nearly three times more oil volume than Russia's exports at the start of the Ukraine war, posing a significantly larger threat to the global economy and inflation.

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.

The Middle East conflict has moved beyond risk to a physical blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. With commercial tankers no longer transiting, nearly 20% of global oil is cut off from markets. This supply disruption, not just a risk premium, is driving oil prices toward $100/barrel.

The market impact from the expected, but unrealized, loss of 3 million barrels/day from Russia was immense. The current Strait of Hormuz disruption is four to five times larger at 14 million barrels/day. This scale of shortage is historically unprecedented, meaning past events are poor guides for predicting market outcomes.

Major historical oil price movements were triggered by supply-demand imbalances of just 2-3 million barrels per day. A disruption at the Strait of Hormuz would impact 20 million barrels daily, a scale that dwarfs previous crises and renders standard analytical models inadequate.

The conflict's primary impact on oil is not that supply is offline, but that its transport through the Strait of Hormuz is blocked. This distinction is key to understanding price scenarios, as supply exists but cannot be delivered.

The full impact of the Hormuz closure hasn't hit yet. An "air pocket" in global tanker supply is developing. When tankers that departed pre-conflict finally arrive at their destinations, Asian inventories will begin drawing down at an unprecedented 10-15 million barrels per day, triggering a severe, delayed price shock.

The current 20M barrel/day disruption dwarfs historical crises like the 1973 embargo (~4.5M bpd). This unprecedented scale explains extreme market volatility and why releasing strategic reserves offers only a brief, insufficient reprieve. The math of the problem is simply different this time.