Thoughts on the Market

Oil Markets Are Even Tighter Than They Appear

35 snips
Mar 24, 2026
A deep dive into how a Strait of Hormuz shutdown has created a major global oil supply shock. Discussion of floating storage surging and immediate production cuts. Examination of partial workarounds like pipelines and reserves and why a large shortfall likely remains. Coverage of acute refined product shortages and two scenarios for reopening versus prolonged closure.
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INSIGHT

Strait Closure Creates Massive Immediate Supply Loss

  • The Strait of Hormuz disruptions have effectively removed about 20% of global oil supply.
  • Tanker departures fell from ~35 to 0–2 per day and floating storage in the Gulf surged to over 120 million barrels, forcing producers to cut output.
INSIGHT

Floating Storage Masked Then Revealed The Shock

  • Floating storage briefly buffered flows but is now full, turning delays into real production cuts.
  • With over 120 million barrels stored and new loadings stopped, about 10 million barrels per day of upstream output is offline.
INSIGHT

Offsets Won't Plug The Large Remaining Shortfall

  • Partial offsets exist but cannot fully close the gap; the residual shortfall is about 10–12 million barrels per day.
  • This shock is over three times larger than the 2022 supply shock that pushed Brent toward $130/bbl.
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