We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.
The oil market appears calm despite the Hormuz closure because the initial price spike in March had priced in a massive tail risk of direct attacks on Saudi and UAE production infrastructure. With a ceasefire announced, that 'fat tail' premium has disappeared, leading to sideways price action.
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.
Despite the administration's mixed and often aggressive messaging, financial markets are betting on a swift end to the conflict. The significant drop in oil prices reflects a collective, unemotional assessment that the Straits of Hormuz will reopen soon, providing a powerful counter-signal to political statements.
The recent surge in oil prices to $78 per barrel is not just vague fear. Analyst models suggest the market has priced in an $8-13 risk premium, which corresponds directly to the expected impact of a complete, four-week closure of the Strait of Hormuz, providing a concrete measure of market sentiment.
Financial markets are focused on the economic impact of conflict, not the conflict itself. For the Iran crisis, the key factor is the flow of oil and LNG. If the Strait of Hormuz were to reopen, markets would likely look past the ongoing fighting, treating it as a political issue rather than a market-moving event.
The Iran conflict has revealed the vulnerability of the Strait of Hormuz. Even after the strait reopens, oil prices are unlikely to return to pre-conflict levels. A new, persistent risk premium of up to $20/barrel will be priced in to reflect this ongoing geopolitical threat.
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.
Oil futures are trading near $100/barrel, significantly below the $125-$130 price implied by the current 10 million barrel/day supply disruption. This price gap indicates a strong market consensus that the conflict will end quickly and production will resume.
Even with de-escalation, the Strait of Hormuz remains a critical choke point. The persistent threat of future conflict creates a "structural risk premium" on oil, preventing prices from returning to previous lows. This premium impacts energy, shipping, and food supply chains globally.
Despite heightened U.S.-Iran tensions, oil prices show only a minor risk premium (~$2). The market believes an oversupplied global market, coupled with a U.S. preference for surgical strikes that avoid energy infrastructure, will prevent a major supply disruption.