Energy Markets are on the Verge of a Disaster
Wall Street just hit fresh all-time highs, seemingly oblivious to a shooting war that has closed the world's most critical oil chokepoint. While equity traders celebrate diplomatic headlines and buy every dip, the people who actually move physical barrels of crude are watching a very different reality unfold in the Strait of Hormuz. Ships are sneaking through with their transponders off, captains are being boarded by Iranian Revolutionary Guards, and the global economy has quietly burned through its last reserves of seaborne oil. The gap between futures prices and physical market conditions has never been wider — and someone is about to be proven catastrophically wrong.
Punti chiave
The Strait of Hormuz has effectively become a dual blockade, with Iran restricting hostile vessels and the US Navy counter-blocking Iranian ports, forcing merchant ships to navigate in darkness with transponders off while both sides seize vessels.
The world has exhausted its seaborne oil buffer as the last tankers that crossed Hormuz before the fighting reached their destinations by April 20th, with traders warning that a cumulative loss of 1.5 billion barrels is now unavoidable even if a ceasefire holds.
US shale executives are refusing administration calls to increase production due to extreme volatility between physical and futures prices, taking a rational «do nothing» approach rather than risk overproducing into a suddenly resolved crisis.
The energy crisis is rapidly becoming a global food crisis as anhydrous ammonia prices jumped from $800 to $1,050 per ton, with 70% of US farmers reporting they cannot afford the fertilizer they need for this crop cycle.
While the physical economy is more resilient to oil shocks than the 1970s, the financial system is far more vulnerable with record-high equity valuations and interconnected private credit markets that did not exist during previous energy crises.
In breve
Investors are betting on a swift diplomatic resolution while physical commodity traders face the largest oil supply disruption in history, one that cannot be resolved with a presidential tweet because Iran has discovered that holding the global economy hostage is incredibly effective leverage.
The Maritime Prison Break
Ships trapped in the Persian Gulf are sneaking through in darkness with transponders off.
The situation in the Strait of Hormuz has devolved into what shipping executives describe as a high-stakes maritime prison break. About 45 ships have entered or exited the strait since the temporary ceasefire was first agreed on April 8th, but yesterday only five made it through in a 24-hour period. At least 22 ships have been attacked and several others seized by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard since the conflict began. Captains are lining up in what one executive called a «snake of ships» and attempting to slip through under cover of darkness.
The chaos has created a dual blockade scenario. Iran has restricted passage to hostile vessels from unfriendly countries, while the US Navy began its own counter-blockade on April 13th targeting ships bound for Iranian ports. Ships tied to companies like MSC Group, which has business partnerships with Israel, are attempting to sneak through with GPS transponders completely turned off, hiding behind Omani flags or navigating demands to pay safe passage tolls in cryptocurrency. The resulting backlog has created what one executive described as a «car park of 3 to 400 ships» desperately waiting to escape, with Western governments completely abandoning these merchant vessels to fend for themselves.
The Buffer is Exhausted
The last seaborne oil reserves that insulated markets have now reached their destinations.
The Buffer is Exhausted
By April 20th, the final tankers that managed to cross Hormuz before fighting began reached their destinations in places like Malaysia and California. The seaborne buffer that insulated markets for weeks is now completely exhausted. Traders warn that a cumulative loss of 1.5 billion barrels — roughly 5% of annual global output — is almost unavoidable at this point, and the market might not return to equilibrium until 2030 due to this permanent supply loss.
Why US Shale Won't Rescue the Market
Key Numbers Behind the Crisis
Critical statistics reveal the scale and consequences of the Hormuz blockade.
The Hidden Commodity Shocks
Beyond oil, critical materials from helium to sulfur face severe disruptions.
Jet Fuel Shortage Looms Europe's refining capacity can cover at most 70% of what airlines need, and its 50 days of reserves will fall precipitously if flows don't normalize by June. If the US bans refined fuel exports to prioritize domestic prices, Europe's aviation sector will hit a wall.
Helium Supply Choked Off Qatar accounts for roughly a third of global helium supply, which cannot be shipped by air. This irreplaceable coolant is essential for MRI machines, semiconductor chip manufacturing, and clean rooms with no synthetic substitute available.
Fertilizer Crisis Deepens The Strait of Hormuz handles roughly a third of the world's seaborne fertilizer trade. Natural gas is the primary feedstock for nitrogen-based fertilizers, and when the strait closes and gas prices spike, agricultural input costs explode.
Sulfur Diverted to Industry Sulfur, the fourth major agricultural nutrient after nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, is being diverted to higher-value industrial uses like copper smelting due to the crisis, leaving fertilizer producers waiting at the back of the queue.
Global Shipping in Gridlock
The blockade forces massive detours that remove shipping capacity from the entire system.
The global shipping industry operates as a closed loop, and because ships can no longer safely pass through the Strait of Hormuz, they're being forced to take a massive detour around the Cape of Good Hope. This significantly extends journey times, which effectively removes a huge chunk of shipping capacity from the global market. The logistical nightmare ripples far beyond the Middle East as ships that would normally transit Hormuz are now competing for limited slots at the Panama Canal.
Congestion at the Panama Canal has intensified dramatically as buyers purchase crude oil from the Gulf of Mexico to replace their Middle Eastern supplies. The canal was already dealing with severe transit restrictions due to historic droughts. Now with oil tankers outbidding bulk carriers for scarce transit slots, wait times have stretched to around 40 days. Ships carrying lower-value cargos like grain are being pushed to the back of the queue as oil tanker operators pay millions of dollars to skip to the front, and some grain routes have already seen shipping rates increase by 50 to 60%.
Two Definitions of Catastrophe
Agricultural traders worry about famine while luxury executives lament handbag sales.
Why This Crisis is Worse Than the 1970s
Absolute disruption volume is largest in history despite lower oil intensity of GDP.
As Daniel Yergin pointed out recently, the absolute volume of the disruption we're seeing today is the largest in history. Global oil production and consumption are roughly twice what they were during the 1973 Arab oil embargo and the 1978 Iranian oil workers strike. However, major economies are structurally much more resilient to oil shocks today. The oil intensity of GDP — how many barrels it takes to produce a single inflation-adjusted dollar of economic output — has declined by more than 70% since the 1970s through more efficient factories, better vehicle mileage, and diversified power grids.
But while the physical economy might be less vulnerable, the financial economy is standing on much shakier ground. Paul Krugman noted that in 1978, the price-to-earnings ratio of the S&P 500 was sitting at historic lows. Today, equity valuations are stretched to near-record highs, supported by a highly complex, interconnected private credit market that didn't exist in the 1970s. We have an economy that requires less oil, but a financial system with a much lower margin of safety for a prolonged inflation shock that could rapidly unwind today's stretched valuations.
The Great Illusion Shatters
Economic interdependence was supposed to prevent conflict but has become mutual leverage.
“The interdependence that was supposed to be our safety net is framed from both ends. On one side, Iran has discovered that holding the global economy hostage with a fleet of cheap drones is a highly effective negotiating tactic. On the other, the world's major economies have spent the last two years actively reducing their dependence on each other through tariffs, export controls, and onshoring, dismantling the very web of trade relationships that was supposed to make a crisis like this irrational.”
Inflation is Back and Sticky
Who Wins and Loses in the New Order
Energy shocks redirect global capital flows without rebalancing the world economy.
Who Wins and Loses in the New Order
Economist Brad Setser points out that this energy shock won't magically rebalance the global economy or wipe out Asia's massive trade surpluses. China's surplus in manufactured goods is so structurally enormous that even paying record prices to import seaborne oil barely makes a dent. Instead, the crisis simply redirects dollars that were accumulating in Beijing towards alternative oil and gas exporters: Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Norway, Russia, and South American producers. The result is a reshuffling of who holds the world's dollars rather than a fundamental rebalancing, with American consumers absorbing the pain through higher prices on everything while exporters capture the windfall.
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