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It is like the market believes in magic. That makes Brent 2027 such a bargain

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IEA Proposes Largest Ever Oil Release From Strategic Reserves (WSJ). Brent up 3.3%. Doesn’t look like the oil market thinks that ”largest ever” release of strategic reserves will help much against current crisis. Brent up 4% to $91.3/b. 

Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB
Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB

Buy Brent 2027 at close to ”neutral price”. Brent crude for year 2027 is trading at $71.6/b. That is just $3.6/b above the ”neutral price” of $68/b. When the global oil market fluctuates between surplus and deficit, the Brent spot price will swing below or above this ”neutral price” of $68/b. Sometimes way below as in spring of 2020 and sometimes way above.

Brent spot is trading $22/b above the ”neutral price” of $68/b. The Brent 1M price is trading at $90/b this morning and $22/b above the ”neutral price” in an expression of risk, stress and disruption of oil logistics as the Persian Gulf is closed. But the market is pricing Brent Y2027 at $71.6/b and a premium of only $3.6/b above the neutral price. Implicitly assuming that the oil market will be normal in 2027 with normal inventories and normal supply. Everything restored.

If global stocks draws down 500 mb, then $80/b 2027 is the price. More if oil infrastructure damaged. Brent averaged $81/b in 2023/24. Then global visible stocks rose 500 mb in 2025. Mostly east of Suez. Brent then averaged $63/b in 4Q25. If the Strait of Hormuz is closed for 25 days, then global stocks will draw down by 500 mb. Brent should then trade around $80/b just due to the inventory drawdown. Higher if inventories are drawn down more and yet higher if installations of oil production, processing, refining or shipping logistics are damaged. Takes significant time to repair and restore.

When the market now prices Brent 2027 at only $71.2/b it thus assumes that inventories will only draw down by some 250 mb. Ops, we are already there as the Strait of Hormuz now has been closed for 11-12 days. It also assumes that there will be absolutely no lasting damage to oil infrastructure in the Persian Gulf.

Risk that Israel will damage Iranian oil infrastructure. It is increasingly argued that Israel and the US have different strategic goals. The US/Trump wants to end this as quickly as possible. Wants to see oil prices fall quickly back to normal. Israel however probably wants to use this once in a lifetime opportunity to totally destroy and degrade Iran altogether. High or ultrahigh oil price not so important. Leaving Iran with no water, no oil, no money, no economy and very limited capability to rebuild its country (and weapons systems and nuclear facilities) after the war.

Brent 2027 is just one Israeli bomb away from jumping to $80/b or higher. Brent crude calendar 2027 today trading at $71.6/b is just one Israeli bomb (hitting Iranian oil infrastructure) away from trading at $80/b or higher. Global inventories have already suffered 11-12 days of Hormuz closure. I.e. the world has lost 220 – 240 mb of oil stocks. And as stated above, the price of $71.6/b is only $3.6/b above the ”everything is normal price”. What a bargain. Buy it!

Fear is starting to rush through the veins Birol. Looking back at recent events. Fathi Birol (IEA) last week: ”Plenty of oil in the market. No need to release strategic reserves.” Then G7 preparing for release. And now ”IEA Proposes Largest Ever Oil Release From Strategic Reserves (WSJ)”. This shows how the sense of fear is starting to rush through the veins Birol.

Oil price spike forced Trump to the podium. Another is on Monday. Brent spiked to $119.5/b. That forced Trump to jump to the podium reading a statement (quite rare that he reads a pre-written note) of how great everything is going. That all will soon be over. Any issues with the oil market and oil prices will be solved. Trump has the oil markets back. Market believed him and Brent fell sharply. This shows the power of oil. It makes even the most powerful person in the world jump to the podium in an effort to try to talk away the physical problems of the world. It shows that Trump is not in control. Iran declared right after the speech that it is not up to Trump to decide when the war is over. Iran will decide when it is over. Trump might declare victory, pack up and go home. That will however not give any guarantees for the opening of the Strait of Hormuz. That is up to Iran.

Iran has the upper hand. They control the Strait of Hormuz. They control the oil. Trump, Birol and the rest are basically talking about it.

No signs that the world is able to open the Strait of Hormuz by force as promised. We have seen reassurances over the past week that insurance schemes will be set up to cover the war risks so that ships can go through. And that warships will provide safe passage in convoys. Nothing of that so far. It doesn’t take very expensive weapons (Iran has loads of Shahed drones) to shoot at the VLCCs going through. A drone now and then will keep flow of oil through the Strait of Hormuz muted if not fully closed.  

Oil for all or oil for no one. “Strait of Hormuz will either be a Strait of peace and prosperity for all,” Ali Larijani, Iran’s top national security official, said in a social media post on Tuesday. “Or it will be a Strait of defeat and suffering for warmongers.”

Brent Y2027 and beyond is such a bargain!

Source: SEB graph and highlights, Bloomberg data
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Oil product price pain is set to rise as the Strait of Hormuz stays closed into summer

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Market is starting to take US/Iran headlines with a pinch of salt. Brent crude rose $2.8/b yesterday to an official close of $112.1/b. But after that it traded as low as $108.05/b before ending late night at around $109.7/b. Through the day it traded in a range of $106.87 – 112.72/b amid a flurry of news or rumors from Iran and the US. ”US temporary sanctions during negotiations” (falls alarm). ”We will bomb Iran” (not anyhow),… etc. While the market is still fluctuating to this kind of news flow, it is starting to take such headlines with a pinch of salt.

Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB
Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB

We’ll see. Maybe, maybe not. The Brent M1 contract is trading at $110.2/b this morning which very close to the average ticks through yesterday of $110.4/b.

Trump with bearish, verbal intervention whenever Brent trades above $110/b it seems. What seems to be a pattern is that Trump states something like ”very good negotiations going on with Iran”, ”New leaders in Iran are great,..”, ”Great progress in negotiations,…”, ”Deal in sight,..” etc whenever the Brent M1 contract trades above $110/b. An effort to cool the market. These hot air verbal interventions from Trump used to have a heavy bearish impact on prices, but they now seems to have less and less effect unless they are backed by reality.

As far as we can see there has been no real progress in the negotiations between the US and Iran with both sides still standing by their previous demands.

Iran is getting stronger while the cease fire lasts making a return to war for Trump yet harder. Iran is naturally in constant preparation for a return to war given Trump’s steady threats of bombing Iran again. Iran is naturally doing what ever is possible to prepare for a return to war. And every day the cease fire lasts it is better prepared. This naturally makes it more and more difficult and dangerous for the US to return to warring activity versus Iran as the consequences for energy infrastructure in the Persian Gulf will be more and more severe the longer the cease fire lasts. Israel seems to see it this way as well. That the war is not won and that current frozen state of a cease fire gives Iran opportunity to rebuild military and politically.

Global inventories are drawing down day by day. How much? In the meantime the Strait of Hormuz stays closed. There is varying measures and estimates of how much global inventories are drawing down. Our rough estimate, back of the envelope, is that global inventories are drawing down by at least some 10 mb/d or about 300 mb/d in a balance between loss of supply versus demand destruction. Other estimates we see are a monthly draw of 250-270 mb/d. The IEA only ’measured’ a draw in global observable stocks of 117 mb in April with oil on water rising 53 mb while on shore stocks fell 170 mb. But global stocks are hard to measure with large invisible, unmeasured stocks. As such a back of the envelope approach may be better.

Oil products is what the world is consuming. Oil product prices likely to rise while product stocks fall. Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR) are predominantly crude oil. Discharging oil from OECD SPR stocks, a sharp reduction in Chinese crude imports and a reduction in global refinery throughput of 6-7 mb/d has helped to keep crude oil markets satisfactorily supplied. But global inventories are drawing down none the less. And oil products is really what the world is consuming. So if global refinery throughput stays subdued, then demand will eventually have to match the supply of oil products. The likely path forward this summer is a steady draw down in jet fuel, diesel and gasoline. Higher prices for these. Then, if possible, higher refinery throughput and higher usage of crude in response to very profitable refinery margins. And lastly sharper draw in crude stocks and higher prices for these. But some 6 mb/d of oil products used to be exported through the Strait of Hormuz. And it may not be so easy to ramp up refinery activity across the world to compensate. Especially as Ukraine continues to damage Russian refineries as well as Russian crude production and export facilities.

Watch oil product stocks and prices as well as Brent calendar 2027. What to watch for this summer is thus oil product inventories falling and oil product premiums to crude rising. Another measure to watch is the Brent crude 2027 contract as it rises steadily day by day as the Strait of Hormuz stays closed and global oil inventories decline. The latter is close to the highest level since the start of the war and keeps rising.

The Brent M1 contract and the Brent 2027 prices and current price of jet fuel in Europe (ARA). All in USD/b

Source: SEB graph, Bloomberg data

Our back of the envelope calculation of the global shortage created by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Note that 3.5 mb/d of discharge from SPR is also a draw. Note also that ’Forced demand loss’ of 2.5 mb/d is probably temporary and will fall back towards zero as logistics are sorted out leaving ’Price demand loss’ to do the job of balancing the market. Thus a shortfall of at least 9 mb/d created by the closure. More if SPR discharge is included and more if Forced demand loss recedes.

Our back of the envelope calculation of the global shortage created by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
Source: SEB graph and calculations
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Brent crude up USD 9/bl on the week… ”deal around the corner” narrative fades

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Brent is climbing higher. Front-month is at USD 106.3/bl this morning, close to a weekly high and a USD 9/bl jump from Mondays open. This is the move we flagged as a risk earlier in the week: the market shifting from ”a deal is around the corner” to ”this is going to take longer than we thought”.

Ole R. Hvalbye, Analyst Commodities, SEB
Ole R. Hvalbye,
Analyst Commodities, SEB

During April, rest-of-year Brent remained remarkably stable around USD 90/bl. A stability which rested on one single assumption: the SoH reopens around 1 May. That assumption is now slowly falling apart.

As we highlighted yesterday: every week of delay beyond 1 May adds (theoretically) ish USD 5/bl to the rest-of-year average, as global inventories draw 100 million barrels per week. i.e., a mid-May reopening implies rest-of-year Brent closer to USD 100/bl, and anything pushing into June or July takes us meaningfully higher.

What’s changed in the last 48 hours:

#1: The US military has formally warned that clearing suspected sea mines from SoH could take up to six months. That is a completely different timescale from what the financial market is pricing. Even a political deal tomorrow does not immediately reopen the strait.

#2: Trump has shifted his tone from urgency to ”strategic patience”. In yesterday’s press conference: ”Don’t rush me… I want a great deal.” The market is reading this as a president no longer feeling pressured by timelines, with the naval blockade running in the background.

#3: So far, the military activity is escalating, not de-escalating. Axios reports Iran is laying more mines in SoH. The US 3rd carrier strike group (USS George H.W. Bush) is arriving with two countermine vessels. Trump yesterday ordered the US Navy to destroy any Iranian boats caught laying mines. While CNN reports that the Pentagon is actively drawing up plans to strike Iranian SoH capabilities and individual Iranian military leaders if the ceasefire collapses. i.e., NOT a attitude consistent with an imminent deal!

Spot crude and product prices eased off the early-April highs on a combination of system rerouting and deal optimism. Both now weakening. Goldman estimates April Gulf output is reduced by 14.5 mbl/d, or 57% of pre-war supply, a number that keeps getting worse the longer this drags on.

Demand-side adaptation is ongoing: S. Korea has cut its Middle East crude dependence from 69% to 56% by pulling more from the Americas and Africa, and Japan is kicking off a second round of SPR releases from 1 May. But SPRs are finite.

Ref. to the negotiations, we should not bet on speed. The current Iranian leadership is dominated by genuine hardliners willing to absorb economic pain and run the clock to extract concessions. That is not a setup for a rapid resolution. US/Israeli media briefings keep framing the delay as ”internal Iranian divisions”, the reality is more complicated and points toward weeks and months, not days.

Our point is that the complexity is large, and higher prices have only just started (given a scenario where the negotiations drag out in time). The market spent April leaning on the USD 90/bl rest-of-year assumption; that case is diminishing by the hour. If ”early May reopening” is replaced by ”June, July or later” over the next week or two, both crude and products have meaningful room to reprice higher from here. There is a high risk being short energy and betting on any immediate political resolution(!).

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Market Still Betting on Timely Resolution, But Each Day Raises Shortage Risk

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Down on Friday. Up on Monday. The Brent June crude oil contract traded down 5.1% last week to a close of $90.38/b. It reached a high of $103.87/b last Monday and a low of $86.09/b on Friday as Iran announced that the Strait of Hormuz was fully open for transit. That quickly changed over the weekend as the US upheld its blockade of Iranian oil exports while Iran naturally responded by closing the SoH again. The US blew a hole in the engine room of the Iranian ship TOUSKA and took custody of the ship on Sunday. Brent crude is up 5.6% this morning to $95.4/b.

Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB
Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB

The cease-fire is expiring tomorrow. The US has said it will send a delegation for a second round of negotiations in Islamabad in Pakistan. But Iran has for now rejected a second round of talks as it views US demands as  unrealistic and excessive while the US is also blocking the Strait of Hormuz.

While Brent is up 5% this morning, the financial market is still very optimistic that progress will be made. That talks will continue and that the SoH will fully open by the start of May which is consistent with a rest-of-year average Brent crude oil price of around $90/b with the market now trading that balance at around $88/b.

Financial optimism vs. physical deterioration. We have a divergence where the financial market is trading negotiations, improvements and resolution while at the same time the physical market is deteriorating day by day. Physical oil flows remain constrained by disrupted flows, longer voyage times and elevated freight and insurance costs.  

Financial markets are betting that a US/Iranian resolution will save us in time from violent shortages down the road. But every day that the SoH remains closed is bringing us closer to a potentially very painful point of shortages and much higher prices.

The US blockade is also a weapon of leverage against its European and Asian allies. When Iran closed the SoH it held the world economy as a hostage against the US. The US blockade of the SoH is of course blocking Iranian oil exports. But it is also an action of disruption directed towards Europe and Asia. The US has called for the rest of the world to engaged in the war with Iran: ”If you want oil from the Persian Gulf, then go and get it”. A risk is that the US plays brinkmanship with the global oil market directed towards its  European and Asian allies and maybe even towards China to force them to engage and take part. Maybe unthinkable. But unthinkable has become the norm with Trump in the White House.

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