Friday, May 22, 2026

Moment of reckoning in oil markets is at hand

I wrote in an earlier post that the oil markets are under-pricing the risks inherent in the Iran conflict and that a spike in oil prices is not far off.

Even as President Trump weighs the option of another strike on Iran, it appears that the moment of reckoning in oil markets is not far off. Another two or three weeks of the stalemate could push oil prices to over $120 per barrel. And another strike by the US? Well, the bets are truly off.

If that sounds pessimistic, here are two pieces, one by Martin Wolf on the prospects for the oil markets and another by Amos Hochstein on how oil prices can soon impact the US. 

Martin Wolf gives three reasons why we should be worrying:

  • The problem is not just the closure of the Strait of Hormuz but the destruction of physical infrastructure in the Gulf countries
  • The shortages are not just of crude oil but refined products. The US is a net exporter but it has requirements of imported crude of specific varieties.
  • So far the price impact has been muted by the drawdown of stock. But stocks are finite. Moreover, there is not much spare production capacity.
Hochstein presents an interesting fact. Gasoline price has shot up to $4.5 per gallon. The highest level reached so far in the US is $5.02 per barrel which happened in June 2022. Gas prices are poised to rise because, given that jet fuel prices have risen even further, production capacity is being used for jet fuel and not for gasoline! The implications are clear enough:

Energy prices feed into the core consumer price index with a lag of several weeks. The pump pain of May will translate into inflation figures in July and August. The 30-year Treasury yield has risen to the highest level since the financial crisis and the 10-year Treasury yield is already rising. Mortgage costs, corporate borrowing rates and the cost of financing national debt all move with it.

The oil markets are still banking on a swift resolution of the conflict. If that doesn't happen, 'the largest energy shock in history' will wreak havoc on the world economy. 




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