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Oil Markets Face a Billion-Barrel Restocking Problem After Hormuz Closure

By: Editorial Team, StoneX Media

A deficit of roughly one billion barrels in global oil inventories is the central legacy of the Strait of Hormuz disruption, a shortfall that analysts expect will require at least six months of active resupply to resolve. Tanker rates for very large crude carriers entering the Persian Gulf to load crude oil have reached $460,000 a day, a figure that stands at more than four times the pre-disruption market benchmark of approximately $100,000. Those premiums reflect the cost of war-risk insurance, U.S. naval escort arrangements and the security guarantees that ship owners require before committing vessels and crews to transit through contested waters. The scale of the restocking challenge ahead, compounded by structural shifts in supply routes during the closure, means the freight rate and oil price consequences of the Hormuz disruption will not unwind quickly.

Tom Beney is Senior Vice President of Ocean Freight, Commercial, Shipping and Freight at StoneX, where he covers tanker markets, dry bulk freight and the commodity supply chains that route through the world's primary maritime chokepoints. His work spans the intersection of geopolitical events with vessel positioning, route economics and freight rate dynamics across global oil and agricultural markets.

Key Themes from the Discussion

  • Global oil inventories have fallen by roughly one billion barrels, requiring months of coordinated resupply across markets worldwide.
  • Tanker rates for crude oil loading in the Persian Gulf have reached $460,000 a day, more than four times the pre-disruption benchmark.
  • El Nino-driven water level reductions at the Panama Canal are adding a second chokepoint constraint to an already disrupted global freight network.

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Tanker Owners Demand Risk Premiums Before Entering the Persian Gulf

The first market consequence of the Hormuz disruption was, counterintuitively, a softening of freight rates. Ships detained inside the Persian Gulf since late February began exiting in volume, adding tonnage to the global market and pushing rates lower before the economics of returning came into focus. "That initial impact on the market can actually be negative. It can increase the supply of ships and start to bring freight rates down." The dynamic reversed as the cost of re-entry became clear. Very large crude carriers loading Persian Gulf crude were being fixed at $460,000 a day, with Beney noting that "ship owners still need security, still need some insurance, still need to know that vessel and their crews will be safe as they go into load."

Oil Restocking Signals Sustained Price Support Across Global Markets

A deficit of one billion barrels is not absorbed quickly. Restocking oil inventories at that scale requires sustained demand for tanker capacity, pulling ships back into trade flows that were severed during the closure and creating upward pressure on both freight rates and crude prices. In Beney's assessment, the timeline extends well beyond any near-term security resolution. "I think that may mean that we're at a relatively high oil price versus the supply and demand factors for at least another six months." China's position in that equation adds a further complication, as restrictions on refining runs and curbs on clean product exports have reduced Chinese demand at a moment when the global market is already stretched for supply.

Panama Canal Constraints Add a Second Chokepoint to Global Freight

The El Nino weather pattern introduces a second structural risk into global freight markets, one operating independently of the security situation at the Strait of Hormuz. The Panama Canal draws on fresh water from Gatun Lake to operate its locks; reduced rainfall across the Panama region lowers lake levels and restricts the draft allowable for vessels transiting the waterway. The Panama Canal Authority has already announced a reduction in the permitted draft for neopanamax-size vessels in response to current water levels, a move that constrains cargo volumes and limits overall transits to conserve water. "You may see less cargo being able to carry through the canal and less transits overall, and that has quite a big impact overall in the distance traveled from the U.S. East Coast into Asia."

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--- Written by Gus Farrow, Senior Manager, StoneX Media

--- Expert: Tom Beney, SVP of Ocean Freight, Commercial, Shipping and Freight, Global, StoneX

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