Oil is tumbling on a 'glut' but shipping chaos is quietly setting up a fuel squeeze
Iran is disrupting ship traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, but oil prices are actually falling because Middle Eastern producers are desperate to offload massive stockpiles they built up during the conflict. The shipping worries have kept gasoline and diesel supplies tight even as crude oil gets cheaper.
Idea
The Strait of Hormuz disruption is causing ships to make U-turns, which normally would send oil soaring. But oil prices are tumbling instead because Middle East producers are flooding the market with crude they stockpiled during the recent conflict. The key insight from the Total CEO is that while crude supply is overflowing, gasoline and diesel inventories remain constrained due to the shipping worries. This combination — cheap crude but tight refined products — is actually a margin-expansion setup for major oil companies that refine their own product. Integrated oil majors stand to benefit from lower input costs while selling fuel at elevated prices.