Oil Flow Shock: Allies' Refusal to Help Trump's Strait of Hormuz Plan
The core event is a clear geopolitical rejection. European allies have explicitly told the United States they will not join military operations in the Strait of Hormuz. German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul stated Berlin had no intention of joining military operations during the conflict, a position echoed by other EU nations. This refusal leaves the U.S. Navy as the sole actor, pouring cold water on hopes for a quick resolution through a multinational coalition.
The immediate market impact is severe and quantifiable. The conflict has already caused 21 confirmed attacks on merchant ships and effectively shut down the strait. This has led to production shut-ins in Gulf countries of more than 10 million barrels per day. The choke point, which handles about one-fifth of the world's oil shipments, has been shuttered, creating a direct supply shock.
The bottom line is that the U.S. is now isolated in a high-risk mission. With allies refusing to help, the burden falls entirely on American forces to secure a critical waterway, a task that is both logistically daunting and politically fraught. This isolation increases the risk of miscalculation and prolongs the uncertainty that is already driving oil prices higher.
Price Action: The Flow of Money
The physical shock is translating directly into price. Brent crude surged to above $100 a barrel for the first time since August 2022, a 9.2% jump in a single session. This move is a direct response to the strait being shut and production in Gulf countries cut by more than 10 million barrels per day.
Yet the paper market appears to be lagging the physical reality. Despite the surge, futures prices briefly spiked to $119 before retreating, while the premium for physical Dubai crude has soared to $38 per barrel over its paper equivalent. This widening gap signals that immediate supply is being choked off, but the paper market still expects a quick resolution.
Barclays' warning captures the setup: the bank raised its 2026 Brent forecast to $85, but noted prices could reprice to $100 if normalization takes four to six weeks. The market is now pricing in the duration of the disruption, with the paper market's underestimation of the physical shock creating a volatile gap.
The liquidity trap and catalysts
The physical market is under severe stress, creating a liquidity trap. Asian refiners are already considering cuts to processing rates, and fuel exports are being restricted as buyers race to secure cargoes. This is pushing jet and diesel cracks to never-before-seen highs, leaving regions like Europe in a shocking shortfall of middle distillates. The immediate flow of crude is being choked off, but the paper market's response is delayed.
The U.S. Navy is not yet ready to begin escorting tankers, creating a critical gap between the physical disruption and the market's ability to restore flow. This delay is a major catalyst for price pressure. Barclays assumes normalization within two to three weeks, but the market is pricing in a much longer halt. The bank explicitly warns that if the situation takes four to six weeks to resolve, Brent crude could reprice to $100 per barrel.
The bottom line is a mismatch between paper assurances and physical reality. While the IEA's record emergency stock release will take weeks to months to reach the market, the physical supply shock is immediate and massive. With Gulf production cut by over 10 million barrels per day and refining capacity also down, the market's path of least resistance remains higher until the conflict itself shows signs of ending.



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