Thoughts on the Market

Asia’s Energy Dependence Meets a Narrow Strait

28 snips
Mar 23, 2026
Mayank Maheshwari, Asia energy analyst focused on oil, LNG and regional markets, offers a clear look at Strait of Hormuz risks. He outlines how Middle East flows support Asia’s oil, LNG and propane. He highlights tight price signals and why inventories may not prevent early rationing. He flags LNG as an acute pressure point and connects energy disruptions to industry, chemicals and food supply strains.
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INSIGHT

Asia Depends Deeply On The Strait Of Hormuz

  • Asia sources roughly a quarter of its energy (oil, LNG, propane) from the Middle East, much of it through the Strait of Hormuz.
  • For India and China about 40–50% of oil demand transits Hormuz, creating a single chokepoint risk that backs up the entire system.
INSIGHT

Refined Products Signal Tightening Ahead Of Inventory Shortfalls

  • Oil price moves are already signaling supply stress with oil near $100/bbl and Dubai crude trading at a premium to Brent by over $20/bbl.
  • Diesel margins have doubled and jet fuel premiums nearly doubled, indicating tight refined product chains, not just crude balance.
INSIGHT

Inventories Aren't A Simple Buffer For Supply Shocks

  • Asia holds about 65–70 days of crude, but the system reacts before stocks run out via rationing and export limits.
  • Governments are already rationing energy and industries are cutting LNG and LPG usage, showing operational constraints matter more than raw days of inventory.
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