(By Oil & Gas 360) – The oil market is shifting quickly from cautious optimism to supply-driven urgency, as analysts raise price forecasts and physical buyers race to secure crude amid the ongoing conflict in the Middle East.

Several banks have lifted their outlook for oil prices this year, citing a sharp increase in geopolitical risk tied to disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz.
The upgrades reflect a market that is no longer trading on fundamentals alone but increasingly on the risk of supply loss. Analysts note that even limited interruptions to Middle East flows can quickly tighten balances, particularly when spare capacity is already constrained.
At Citigroup, analysts have outlined a wide range of scenarios depending on how the conflict evolves. In a contained environment, prices may remain elevated but stable. In a prolonged disruption, however, crude could move significantly higher as supply losses compound and inventories draw down.
Even relatively modest outages of 1–2 million barrels per day could push prices higher by eroding available spare capacity.
The market is already beginning to reflect those risks.
Physical buyers are scrambling for seaborne crude as supply chains adjust. With flows from parts of the Middle East disrupted and sanctions reshaping trade patterns, refiners and traders are competing more aggressively for available cargoes.
This has tightened prompt markets and increased competition for both barrels and shipping capacity.
At the same time, recent attacks on energy infrastructure have reinforced concerns that disruptions could extend beyond logistics into production itself.
Brent crude has already surged to multi-year highs, briefly approaching $119 per barrel during the height of the escalation, highlighting how quickly markets can reprice when supply is threatened.
The shift is notable. Earlier in the year, many forecasts assumed a relatively balanced market with moderate prices. Now, the range of outcomes has widened significantly, with upside scenarios gaining more attention as geopolitical risks intensify.
For investors and market participants, the focus has moved from demand trends to supply security. The key variables are no longer just economic growth or inventory levels, but the duration and scale of disruption to one of the world’s most critical energy corridors.
In that environment, price forecasts are becoming less about precision and more about probabilities.
And right now, those probabilities are skewing higher.
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Disclaimer
This opinion article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment, legal, or financial advice. The views expressed are based on publicly available information and market conditions at the time of publication and are subject to change without notice.
