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  1. Thoughts on the Market
  2. The 20 million Barrels of Oil Conundrum
The 20 million Barrels of Oil Conundrum

The 20 million Barrels of Oil Conundrum

Thoughts on the Market · Mar 11, 2026

A 20M barrel/day oil disruption from the Strait of Hormuz dwarfs historical shocks, with few offsets, risking extreme price spikes & recession.

Global Oil Prices Are Set by the 60% of Oil on Ships, Not Total Production

The global oil market has two parts: pipeline and seaborne. Price volatility and formation are dominated by the more flexible seaborne market, which can be redirected to meet global demand, making it the critical component for setting prices, despite only being 60% of total consumption.

The 20 million Barrels of Oil Conundrum thumbnail

The 20 million Barrels of Oil Conundrum

Thoughts on the Market·4 days ago

A Hormuz Closure Would Disrupt 10x the Oil Volume That Causes Historical Price Shocks

Major historical oil price movements were triggered by supply-demand imbalances of just 2-3 million barrels per day. A disruption at the Strait of Hormuz would impact 20 million barrels daily, a scale that dwarfs previous crises and renders standard analytical models inadequate.

The 20 million Barrels of Oil Conundrum thumbnail

The 20 million Barrels of Oil Conundrum

Thoughts on the Market·4 days ago

Oil Prices Don't Rise Gradually; They Jump Between a 'Normal' and a 'Crisis' Regime

Inflation-adjusted data reveals two distinct oil price regimes: a common one around $60-$80 and a rare, high-priced "demand destruction" one above $130. Prices in the $100-$110 range are historically uncommon, suggesting the market snaps into a crisis mode rather than scaling linearly.

The 20 million Barrels of Oil Conundrum thumbnail

The 20 million Barrels of Oil Conundrum

Thoughts on the Market·4 days ago

Existing Fail-Safes Can Only Cover One-Third of a Major Strait of Hormuz Oil Disruption

Even a best-case combination of all available workarounds—rerouting pipelines, sanctions relief, and the fastest-ever strategic reserve release—would only mitigate 7 million of the 20 million barrels per day lost from a Hormuz closure. This leaves a practically unsolvable 13 million barrel per day shortfall.

The 20 million Barrels of Oil Conundrum thumbnail

The 20 million Barrels of Oil Conundrum

Thoughts on the Market·4 days ago