Why Iran's $200 oil threat isn't that far-fetched
Oil prices could surge further as the ongoing Iran war disrupts global supply, with fears that prices may spike to $200 a barrel despite Donald Trump’s expectation of a decline. Brent crude is already near $100, up sharply this year, even as a lar...
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But the volumes being moved are extremely modest. Investors still appear ready to give Trump the benefit of the doubt, betting that the crisis will unwind quickly and Hormuz will soon be reopened. Call it the "Trump put," the "TACO trade" or "buying the Trump," but many oil traders seem to be wagering that the president will ultimately be able to limit the market damage.
"When this is over oil prices are going to go down very, very rapidly," Trump told reporters on Monday. However, that optimism looks increasingly hard to square with realities on the ground - both on the battlefield, where fighting is intensifying, and in physical oil markets, where supply snarls are metastasizing.
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Red Alert
Physical crude markets are flashing stress signals that paper markets have so far largely ignored. Omani crude - exported from a terminal outside the Strait of Hormuz - is trading at a record premium of $51 a barrel to Brent, compared with an average of just 75 cents in February, pushing the outright price to around $150 a barrel for May loading. A similar pattern is playing out elsewhere. Cash premiums for Dubai crude jumped to $56 a barrel on Monday from an average of 90 cents in February, according to data from S&P Global Platts and Reuters. The surge reflects the enormous uncertainty over the actual amount of supply available amid repeated Iranian strikes on oil terminals in Oman and at Fujairah, the United Arab Emirates' main oil-exporting terminal outside Hormuz.A shipment from the Gulf takes around a month to reach Asian customers, meaning that with every day Hormuz remains closed, the supply gap facing refiners widens. The strain is already forcing painful adjustments. Refiners across Asia have begun cutting processing rates to conserve dwindling stocks. China's Sinopec, the world's largest refiner by capacity, plans to slash production throughput this month by more than 10% from its original plan due to a crude supply shortfall, Reuters reported. At the same time, China and Thailand have banned exports of refined fuels, a defensive move that risks tightening global markets further.
As crude scarcity deepens, refined fuel prices are soaring. Asian jet fuel prices are approaching $200 a barrel, close to a record of about $220 reached earlier this month.
And this crisis is not confined to Asia. Europe accounted for roughly three-quarters of Middle Eastern jet fuel exports shipped via Hormuz last year - about 379,000 bpd, according to data analytics firm Kpler - yet no cargo has transited the strait since the war began.
Three Times Worse
The comparison with the Ukraine crisis is telling. Russia supplied around 30% of Europe's crude imports and a third of its refined product imports before the invasion of Ukrainein 2022.The physical disruption from the Iran war has already exceeded that feared amount by more than three times, according to Morgan Stanley. To be sure, the oil market entered the Iran war in relatively comfortable shape, with the International Energy Agency forecasting that global supply would exceed demand by around 3.7 million bpd. Of course, that glut has been eliminated by the current disruption. The IEA's announcement last week of plans for a record release of 400 million barrels from member states' strategic petroleum reserves has helped cushion the initial blow. But drawing down inventories cannot substitute for the delivery of new barrels. Even the immediate reopening of Hormuz would not bring instant relief. Around 10 million bpd of Middle Eastern production have been shut in since the conflict began, according to the IEA. Restoring those flows would take weeks, if not months.
The supply shock, in other words, is real and could have legs.
Once Hormuz is finally reopened, oil prices could initially plunge in a relief rally, but given the grim reality in the physical markets, traders may want to think twice before betting that the return to normality Trump has promised is coming anytime soon.
(The opinions expressed here are those of Ron Bousso, a columnist for Reuters.)
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