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The global oil supply disruption is not a simultaneous event but a rolling crisis moving from east to west, dictated by shipping times. Asia, heavily reliant on Gulf crude, is already feeling the squeeze, with Africa and Europe next in line, while the U.S. is the most insulated due to longer transit times and domestic production.
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.
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.
The apparent stability in major oil benchmarks like Brent and WTI is misleading. These serve the Atlantic basin, while the core of the supply shock is in the Middle East. Asian benchmarks like Dubai and Oman are trading at significantly higher levels, revealing the true market tightness that headline prices conceal.
Energy disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz create a cascade effect far beyond fuel prices. The resulting shortages impact petrochemical and fertilizer production, threatening key inputs for everything from manufacturing and electronics to agriculture and basic services like cooking gas for restaurants.
The ongoing conflict has taken 10% of global oil production offline, a supply disruption of a magnitude unseen by economists in at least 20 years. This is a pure supply-side shock, distinct from demand-side shocks like COVID, creating unique and severe inflationary pressures for the global economy.
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.
While many fear production shutdowns, a more significant and probable risk is a logistical shock from shipping disruptions. Even modest delays in tanker transit times could effectively remove millions of barrels per day from the market, causing a significant price spike without a single well being shut down.
The physical impact of a supply disruption isn't immediate. It takes about two weeks for tankers from the Middle East to reach Asia and over three for Europe. This lag means consumers and industries only start feeling the actual shortage weeks after the event, despite immediate price reactions.
Despite holding 65-70 days of crude oil reserves, Asian governments and industries begin rationing energy as soon as supply chains tighten. This preemptive action means the economic pain of a disruption is felt much sooner than official inventory levels would suggest, making the reserves a poor gauge of immediate impact.
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.