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Analysts expected SPR releases to stabilize oil prices during the Hormuz crisis, but China's massive, discretionary pullback in imports—far larger than anticipated—was the primary shock absorber that prevented runaway prices and forced demand destruction globally.

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Chinese oil demand fell much more rapidly than historical precedent suggested it would in response to high energy prices. This implies that China's economy may be becoming more energy-efficient or adaptable than in the past, challenging the reliability of existing forecasting models and suggesting lower future import requirements.

Despite energy shocks, global oil prices have been partly contained because China has significantly reduced its imports. By drawing from its large, previously amassed stockpiles, China is inadvertently acting as a stabilizing force, absorbing some of the market pressure.

The primary reason oil prices didn't surge into the triple digits was China's remarkable ability to adapt. By massively reducing crude imports and switching to other sources like coal while accelerating EV adoption, China single-handedly absorbed a significant portion of the global supply shock.

Asia's resilience to the recent energy shock was surprisingly robust. A key, non-obvious factor was China's 45% reduction in gas imports, which freed up supply for the rest of the region, which is highly dependent on Middle Eastern gas, and helped avoid severe shortages.

Oil demand has contracted by nearly 2 million barrels per day, a scale comparable to the 2009 global financial crisis. This surprisingly sharp and rapid adjustment from consumers and industries is a key factor absorbing the current supply shock, indicating a more flexible global economy than previously understood.

Analyst Doomberg theorizes that the mystery of low oil prices amid Mideast conflict is due to China. Last year, China likely bought enormous amounts of sanctioned oil, lied about its reserve levels, and is now discreetly selling it into the market to keep prices stable and increase its geopolitical leverage.

China's strategy of building oil inventories provides a key balancing force in the market. During periods of temporary supply disruption and high prices, China can simply slow its stock building. This reduction in purchasing effectively cuts demand and helps offset the disruption, stabilizing prices more quickly.

Despite the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, oil prices remain far below the expected $200/barrel. This is because pipeline bypasses, strategic reserve releases, and significant demand destruction in countries like Pakistan and Bangladesh are cushioning the blow, unlike the 2022 shock which hit Germany.

China has cut crude imports by 50% without a visible inventory drawdown or economic slowdown. This suggests it's drawing from massive, unobservable strategic reserves, possibly underground, making it a powerful, silent player in balancing the global oil market during the Hormuz crisis.

Widespread predictions of $150 oil failed to materialize during the recent Iran war, largely because China drew down its own substantial oil reserves. This self-interested move, enabled by a multi-year reserve buildup, had the unintended consequence of accommodating US interests and preventing a global price spike.