
World Business Report Turmoil in the Strait of Hormuz sees oil price surge again
Mar 13, 2026
Guest
Melissa / Vanessa Fleischert (New York State Restaurant Association)
Guest
Chinan Dekwal
Guest
John Kilduff
Guest
Chris Lill
Melissa / Vanessa Fleischert, a restaurant association representative, warns of cost pressures on eateries. Chinan Dekwal, African Energy Council vice chair, examines how higher oil prices boost exporters but squeeze consumers. John Kilduff, commodities trader and founding partner at Again Capital, describes frantic trading and volatility. Chris Lill, chief economist at FHN Financial, discusses macro effects on inflation and interest rates.
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Strait Of Hormuz Causes Historic Oil Supply Shock
- Brent crude rose to $103 a barrel as the Strait of Hormuz was effectively closed, creating what analysts call the biggest supply disruption in oil history.
- The closure removed roughly 20 million barrels per day from normal flows, forcing SPR releases and sanction waivers to partially offset losses.
Volatility Is Forcing Rapid Price Rewrites
- Traders face extreme intraday volatility, with Brent moving $5 or more between publication and a trader's note, complicating procurement and hedging.
- Consumers already feel it: US airfares doubled on some routes and California pump prices exceeded $7/gallon.
Trader Perspective On Market Chaos
- John Kilduff described trading desks as unusually turbulent after Iran's asymmetric response and the Strait being effectively closed.
- He said many traders are being chased out by extreme volatility despite some profiting from swings.
