Disruptions linked to Iran have translated geopolitical risk into real oil supply constraints, reshaping global energy markets.
Energy markets have become the front line of the Iran conflict’s market impact. Geopolitical risk was widely anticipated, and crude prices had already moved higher in the weeks ahead of the attacks. However, the abrupt slowdown in physical flows through the Strait of Hormuz has introduced a new and more acute supply risk.
Iran produces 3-3.5 million barrels a day (mmbbl/d) of oil, exporting largely to China at discounted prices. With limited remaining OPEC+ spare capacity, any prolonged disruption would be difficult to offset. OPEC’s latest production increase is marginal relative to the scale of potential disruption. If barrels cannot transit the Strait, headline supply hikes offer little real relief.
The key question for markets is no longer whether oil reacts, but how long physical disruptions persist.
The Strait of Hormuz: A bottleneck under pressure
Shipping through the Strait of Hormuz is effectively at a standstill as of early March. Aside from Iranian vessels, there have been very few confirmed tanker crossings, as shipowners cancel transits and insurers withdraw coverage following attacks on multiple vessels. This dynamic alone is sufficient to embed a significant geopolitical risk premium into oil prices.
The White House has said it will backstop insurance and potentially provide US naval escorts. As US naval assets in the region are likely stretched by ongoing operations, it is unclear how quickly naval escorts can be implemented, and timing matters. If shipping disruptions persist, regional storage constraints become binding, forcing producers to shut-in supply regardless of demand.
Shut‑ins are no longer theoretical
The consequences of constrained transit are already visible:
- Iraq has cut oil production by roughly 1.5 mmbbl/d as of 3 March.
- Kuwait and the UAE are reducing production to manage storage requirements.
- If the Strait remains effectively closed, additional shut-ins will be significant as storage fills.
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia illustrates both the mitigation options and their limits. The kingdom exports roughly 7.2 mmbbl/d of oil through the Strait but has a 5 mmbbl/d pipeline to the Red Sea. Saudi producers are reportedly asking customers to lift barrels from western ports instead. Even so, those routes are not risk‑free, underscoring that alternative logistics come with their own security challenges.
US refiners emerge as near‑term beneficiaries
Refined product markets are amplifying these dynamics. Nearly 4 mmbbl/d of refined products normally transit the Strait, and refinery throughput has already been impacted, tightening global product balances. Several oil refineries across the Middle East have been attacked throughout the week, while Kuwait has reportedly already reduced refining output due to a lack of remaining storage capacity, and is expected to cut further in the coming days. Asian refiners, facing impaired crude supply, are also reducing throughput.
Meanwhile, diesel and jet fuel cracks are up sharply this week, reflecting tighter product supply. In Europe, natural gas prices have surged, lifting global refining costs, while US natural gas prices are up only modestly, improving cost competitiveness for US operators.
These factors have driven notable outperformance in US refining equities as markets reprice regional winners and losers from the disruption.
Liquefied natural gas (LNG) shock compounds the energy story
Oil is not the only channel. International natural gas prices have jumped after QatarEnergy halted LNG production (around 20% of global LNG supply). It declared force majeure following an attack; however, shut-in was inevitable given its lack of alternative routes to market and limited on-site storage capacity – typical for LNG plants given the high cost of LNG storage. Given the scale of the facility, it could take weeks to restart after shipping lanes reopen and even longer to return to full capacity.
This development tightens global gas balances and raises energy costs for import‑dependent regions. US LNG exporters benefit from a wider transatlantic price spread, while companies with direct exposure to Qatar LNG production face near‑term cash flow headwinds. The broader takeaway is that energy insecurity is reinforcing inflation pressures outside the United States.
Oil services disruptions outweigh price support
Oil service companies have lagged despite higher oil prices. The Middle East is a core region for global oil services, but operations there are increasingly disrupted. With flights cancelled, embassies closed and many workers sheltering in place, offshore activity has been effectively suspended in parts of the region.
Shut‑ins and operational disruption translate into slower service activity, even when prices are rising. For now, execution risk is dominating the oil services outlook.
The bottom line
The Iran conflict has shifted oil markets from abstract geopolitical risk to tangible supply disruption. With shipping through the Strait of Hormuz nearly halted, storage constraints are forcing shut‑ins, refining margins are widening unevenly, and energy prices are transmitting inflation risk back into the global economy. The key question for markets is no longer whether oil reacts, but how long physical disruptions persist and whether energy shocks begin to drive broader financial tightening.