Unlike other regions, Europe's primary oil challenge is economic, not physical. Its higher inventories and access to alternative Atlantic Basin supplies provide insulation from outright shortages. The impact will manifest as rising costs from competition with Asia, driving demand destruction through price rather than unavailability.
While Saudi Arabia can increase oil flows through its east-west pipeline to bypass the Strait of Hormuz, the ultimate constraint isn't the pipeline itself. The real bottleneck is the Port of Yanbu on the Red Sea, which has a fixed daily export capacity, limiting the effectiveness of the entire bypass strategy.
Recent gold sales by central banks to defend their currencies are undermining the long-term structural bull case that relied on consistent official sector buying. This shifts the burden of demand to investors, making gold's price more conditional on macro sentiment and ETF flows rather than steady central bank purchases.
After initially selling off with other assets due to broad de-risking for liquidity, gold is beginning to reassert its safe-haven status. It has started rallying even as equities fall, suggesting the initial wave of forced selling has subsided, allowing its traditional negative correlation with risk assets to return.
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.
