date compiled: 2026-04-14

institution: JPMorgan Chase

type: investment-bank

description: JPMorgan's Natasha Kaneva projected OECD oil inventories could reach "operational stress levels" by June and minimum operating thresholds by September — ~280M barrels already consumed from strategic buffers — flagging the most acute inventory runway risk of any major bank.

institution: JPMorgan Chase

sources: JPMorgan Global Research (Commodities), Reuters, OilPrice.com


Related Articles

Q1 Supply Destruction · Q2 Price Impact · Synthesis · Morgan Stanley Oil Scenarios 2026 · Goldman Sachs Oil Outlook 2026


Pre-War Baseline Forecast (Before February 2026 Conflict)


War Scenario Analysis (Key Addition from Apr 14 Source)


Post-War/De-escalation Scenario


Geopolitical Context in Pre-War Assessment


Comparison to Banks (Updated Apr 14)

InstitutionQ2 2026 BrentWorst CaseNotes
Goldman Sachs$90/b$120 (if Hormuz shut another month)Trimmed on ceasefire
Morgan Stanley$110/b$150–$180Most bullish major bank; maintained Apr 13
JPMorgan~$100/b (partial de-escalation)$150/b+ if disruptions persist past mid-MayHard ceiling trigger: mid-May 2026
IEAPhysical near $150/bblPhysical-futures disconnect
OIES$116/b April peak1.9 mb/d 2026 deficit

Key JPMorgan Insight

The pre-war JPMorgan analysis described oil markets as fundamentally oversupplied — a stark contrast to the post-conflict $100–$150/bbl environment. The contrast between the $60/bbl pre-war base case and the $150/bbl war scenario ceiling represents the most dramatic pre/post conflict price divergence among major bank forecasts.

The mid-May 2026 trigger date is the key variable JPMorgan identifies for distinguishing between the $100/b de-escalation scenario and the $150+ war ceiling scenario.

Synthesis · Goldman Sachs Oil Outlook 2026 · Morgan Stanley Oil Scenarios 2026 · Iea April 2026

JPMorgan-Oil-Outlook-2026.md