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A significant disconnect exists between those trading physical energy barrels and those trading financial instruments. In Singapore, physical traders are experiencing "extraordinary" stress due to real-world supply constraints, while equity markets remain buoyant, suggesting a potential mispricing of systemic risk.
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.
After weathering COVID, the Russia-Ukraine war, and Houthi attacks, the oil market grew "overly sanguine," learning that it was flexible enough to fix most problems. This learned resilience left it unprepared for the Strait of Hormuz closure, a physical problem that market mechanisms cannot easily solve.
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.
Asia is uniquely vulnerable to the current energy crisis not just from price increases but from physical supply shortages—a factor rarely modeled in past shocks. This dual risk poses a more significant threat to economic growth than in other regions, with some economies already facing rationing.
In a major supply crisis, temporary measures like storing oil on ships create a false sense of stability. This buffer is finite. Once it's full, the issue rapidly escalates from a logistical challenge to a direct production shutdown, revealing the system's true fragility and causing a much more severe market shock.
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 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.
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.
During major supply disruptions like the Strait of Hormuz closure, quoted oil prices are misleading. If physical barrels are not being delivered, financial quotes don't represent actual business, creating a significant disconnect between financial and physical markets.
While Brent futures at $113 indicate high stress, the physical market tells a starker story. Spot prices for actual cargoes from the Middle East, like Omani crude, are trading over $150/barrel. This physical premium is the true indicator of the immediate supply shock and risk.