Entry point for the 2026 Hormuz Oil Shock knowledge base. Covers the U.S./Israel–Iran conflict beginning February 28, 2026, the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz (~20% of global oil supply), and the cascading effects on prices, European energy, and global trade.
⚠️ DEVELOPING: US-Iran Framework Deal (May 23–25)
Trump announced a proposed framework agreement on May 23, 2026: 60-day ceasefire extension, Hormuz reopening, Iran permitted to sell oil freely. Not yet signed as of May 25.
Market reaction: Brent fell below $100/bbl for the first time this month — down ~4.8% in a single day. WTI at ~$90. Down from April high of $138/bbl. The oil shock narrative is now contingent on whether the deal holds.
Key questions this creates for the KB:
- Does Hormuz actually reopen and by when?
- Does sanctions relief actually restore Iranian exports quickly?
- Is the physical market disconnect compressing or persisting?
- What happens to backwardation if supply normalizes?
This is the single biggest near-term risk to the oil shock thesis since the conflict began.
The Three Big Questions
Q1 — Supply Disruption
How long and how deep is the supply disruption — and is the US-Iran deal game-changing?
Key findings:
- 11–13M b/d active outage — largest in oil market history
- Hormuz loadings at ~3.8M b/d vs 20M+ pre-crisis
- OPEC production collapsed 27% MoM to 20.8M bpd
- UAE departed OPEC May 1 — structural supply risk added
⚠️ Big question now: Does the proposed Hormuz reopening actually restore flows? If the deal holds, the outage magnitude could normalize faster than any model predicted. If it collapses, the 11–13M b/d figure holds.
Q2 — Price Impact
How high does oil go — and what does the US-Iran deal mean for prices?
Key findings:
- Physical crude at ~$150/bbl vs futures at ~$99/bbl — $51/bbl disconnect (IEA April)
- Sell-side cannot generate a credible clearing price for 11–13M b/d outage
- WTI backwardation: $20.65 premium for June 2026 over June 2027; $34.47 premium over June 2028
- Goldman: global inventory draw at 8.7M b/d — double the March rate
⚠️ Big question now: Brent just broke below $100 on deal news. But physical market remains in extreme backwardation — the paper price collapse hasn't been reflected in physical markets yet. Are we seeing the beginning of a physical-paper compression, or a divergence that will drive the next leg up?
Q3 — Europe Exposure
How acutely is Europe impacted — and what does the US-Iran deal change?
Key findings:
- European refineries cutting -6M b/d globally (IEA)
- Dated Brent spread at +$22.80 — European marker under severe pressure
- LNG substitution data-poor — high priority gap
- European gas storage pre-crisis starting position: ~83% full (Oct 2025)
⚠️ Big question now: If Hormuz reopens and LNG demand pressure eases, does Europe get relief? Or is the structural damage to European refining (Group III base oils, motor oil shortages) already locked in regardless of a diplomatic resolution?
Key Analytical Themes
| Theme | Description |
|---|---|
| Contango vs Backwardation | Forward curve signals — current extreme backwardation, what contango would mean |
| Breaking Point | Supply shortages override demand destruction — the market's clearing mechanism fails at this scale |
| Ceasefire Dynamics | Why a ceasefire ≠ supply restoration |
| Inventory Depletion | OECD reserves: stress by June, minimum by September — IEA "only weeks left" |
| Motor Oil Crisis | ILMA expects acute shortages by early July — consumer-level impact accelerating |
| Physical-Futures Disconnect | $51/bbl gap — physical market in acute shortage while paper prices correct on deal news |
Current State Summary (May 25, 2026)
Price
| Benchmark | Price | Change |
|---|---|---|
| Brent | ~$98–$100/bbl | −4.8% today; first sub-$100 since early May |
| WTI | ~$90/bbl | Down from $138 April high |
| Physical (IEA) | ~$150/bbl | Not yet adjusted to deal news |
Supply
- Hormuz: 2 vessels/day (May 17) vs normal 125–140
- Chinese tankers: 3 VLCCs ~6M bbl exited via Iranian-cleared corridor May 20
- US exports at record 7.92M b/d — domestic storage being drawn
Demand Destruction
- Goldman: 8.7M b/d global inventory draw rate (double March rate)
- JPMorgan: OECD inventories at "stress operating level" by June, "operational minimum" by September
- EIA: Brent expected ~$106 avg May–June before easing
Institutional Consensus
| Institution | Key Alert |
|---|---|
| Goldman (May 21) | Inventory draw 8.7M b/d; 101 days demand in inventories (8yr low); Q4 Brent $90 |
| JPMorgan (May 18–19) | OECD stress by June; minimum by September if Hormuz stays closed |
| IEA/Birol (May 18) | "Only weeks left" for commercial inventories; largest ever emergency stock release |
| Morgan Stanley (May 25) | Inflation peak May–June; negative growth shock coming |
| IEA (May 13) | "Largest supply disruption in history of global oil market" |
Sources
161 articles across institutional research, daily monitoring, and field reports.
Daily Log
- 2026-05-25 — US-Iran deal, Brent sub-$100, motor oil crisis, Goldman/IEA/EIA ingest
- 2026-05-14 — Discovery
Last updated: 2026-06-01 | Compiled from 161 articles