“Ten weeks into the Iran war, the mystery is deepening. Every day the Strait of Hormuz remains closed, nearly 14m barrels of oil—14% of global output—are lost. At least 2bn barrels will probably disappear from this year’s total even if the strait reopens today. Yet Brent crude, at $106 a barrel, fetches much less than the $129 it hit in 2022, after Russia invaded Ukraine, and nowhere near the $150-200 analysts predicted if the Iran war dragged on.
Two forces explain why the panic has faded. First, non-Gulf producers have turbocharged exports…
The tide of non-Gulf barrels narrowed the supply gap to roughly 8m b/d. Enter the second force: in the same four weeks big oil-buying regions imported 11m b/d less petroleum than a year before. China’s purchases alone dropped by 6.6m b/d. The country’s refiners have even resold some cargoes they had pledged to buy from west Africa and beyond to other Asian buyers.
The fall in imports is not good news… Yet most estimates of demand destruction fall below 5m b/d, suggesting much of the drop in imports reflects caution not privation. Some buyers, too, may believe the strait will reopen soon and are deferring purchases until prices fall. The surprising result is a mini-glut of crude.”
From The Economist.