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The oil market's extreme backwardation means futures contracts for later dates are priced significantly lower than the current spot price. This allows investors to bet on a persistently higher price environment at a lower entry point, capturing the price convergence over time as a form of positive carry with defined risk.

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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.

Attempts to suppress volatility in front-month oil futures do not eliminate risk but merely transfer it. This suppressed energy is reappearing in less-controlled parts of the market, such as extreme price divergence in Oman crude and rising prices in long-dated futures contracts.

In a backwardated market, futures contracts for later delivery are cheaper than the current one. This allows investors to generate a "positive roll yield" by selling high and buying low on each contract roll. This can boost total returns significantly beyond what spot price movement alone would suggest, creating a powerful tailwind.

A significant disconnect exists between asset classes. The oil futures curve prices a prolonged shock, with prices 40% higher by year-end. In contrast, equity and bond markets are largely flat, reflecting a complacent belief in a quick resolution and central bank easing, completely ignoring the underlying supply-demand math.

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.

Oil equities have not matched the massive rally in spot oil prices because their valuations are tied to the forward curve, which has barely moved. Investors believe the current price spike is temporary. A sustained rise in the forward curve is needed before stocks will fully reprice higher.

The crude oil market is trapped in a recurring monthly pattern. For the first half of each month, the forward curve weakens on fears of a supply glut, nearly flipping into contango. Then, a sudden geopolitical shock mid-month causes the curve to snap back into pronounced backwardation, delaying the surplus.

Instead of making binary bets on whether prices will rise or fall, sophisticated traders maximize value from the "shape of the curve"—the price differentials between contract months. They shift hedges to capture these anomalies, a more nuanced approach to risk management.

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.

While short-term oil contracts react to immediate geopolitical stress, a sustained rise in longer-dated prices above $80-$85 indicates the market believes the disruption is persistent, signaling a more severe, long-term economic impact.