The market just got a textbook reminder that the only macro variable that actually matters right now sits in Tehran, not in Washington. WTI crude () is ripping nearly 4% to $101.96-$102.06 per barrel. Brent () is up roughly 3.4%-3.5% to $108.34-$108.76. is +3.59% to $106.9. WTI Midland is +3.29% to $102.9. OPEC Basket sits at $115.4. Indian Basket at $108.9. The trigger wasn’t a supply disruption, an OPEC headline, or a U.S. inventory miss – it was a single line from Iran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei via Reuters: enriched uranium does not leave the country. That sentence rebuilt the war premium that crude had shed on Wednesday’s “final stages” rally, and it did so in less than a single trading session. This is no longer a market trading fundamentals. This is a market trading every word out of Tehran while the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed for the tenth consecutive week.
The intraday print across the benchmark complex is uniformly bid. WTI futures at $100.30-$101.96-$102.06, +$2.05-$2.06 (+2.05%-2.10%), recovering toward the $102 handle after touching as high as $102.30 intraday. Brent crude at $106.74-$108.54, +1.50%-3.4%, pulling back from the daily high near $108.50 but holding the 3% gain. Murban crude at $106.9 (+3.59%), the strongest of the regional benchmarks. at $3.939 per gallon (-0.20%). at $3.479 per gallon (-0.24%). at $3.047/MMBtu (+1.43%). The U.S. retail pump average has crossed $4 per gallon in all 50 states – a real-economy data point that’s hitting consumer wallets directly.
The historical comparison is brutal. Brent at $108.76 sits roughly $44 above its $64.84 print one year ago, a 67.73% increase. One month ago, oil was at $94.75 – the current level is +14.78% in 30 days. Pre-war crude (late February 2026) sat at approximately $70 per barrel. That means the current Brent print carries a war premium of roughly $35-$40 per barrel, or about 50%+ above where it would otherwise be trading on supply-demand fundamentals alone.
This is what changed the tape. Two senior Iranian sources told Reuters that Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei issued a directive ordering Iran’s enriched uranium to remain in the Islamic Republic. This directly complicates one of the U.S. core conditions for any peace deal. President Trump has publicly stated that dismantling Iran’s nuclear program is a central objective of the U.S. war effort, and he has reportedly assured Israeli leaders that any deal must include the removal of Iran’s highly enriched uranium stockpile. Khamenei’s order moves Iran’s negotiating position from “negotiable” to “non-negotiable” on the single issue Washington won’t budge on.
Trump’s response Wednesday was textbook brinkmanship: “We’re all ready to go. We have to get the right answers. It would have to be a complete 100% good answers.” He threatened to resume military action if Iran fails to provide adequate responses, while simultaneously stating he was willing to wait “a couple more days.” That’s a market-moving combination of escalation rhetoric and de-escalation patience that the oil tape can’t price cleanly – which is exactly why crude is whipping in 5%-6% ranges within 24 hours.
The structural backdrop driving everything: the Strait of Hormuz remains severely disrupted by Iran’s blockade for the tenth consecutive week. This is the corridor through which approximately a fifth of the world’s traded oil normally passes. Some shipping data shows partial movement – three supertankers carrying 6 million barrels exited the Strait this week, and two additional supertankers exited with crude bound for China in the past 48 hours. A first LNG tanker broke the Hormuz blockade, and the UK and France are leading a 30-nation military push to reopen the Strait. But these are exceptions, not the new normal. The chokepoint remains 90%+ disrupted.
The International Energy Agency warned Thursday that the oil market will reach a “red zone” this summer if Hormuz does not reopen. IEA chief Fatih Birol flagged that global oil stockpiles will deplete rapidly as demand picks up during summer travel season. The math is uncompromising: summer demand peaks while supply remains constrained. That’s the recipe for a price spike, not a price retreat.
The supply destruction is now measurable. UBS estimates overall oil production losses likely reached 650 million barrels over March and April, and are on track to exceed 1 billion barrels by the end of May. That’s the largest supply shock in oil market history measured by absolute volume lost. Goldman Sachs has sounded fresh alarms on global oil stockpiles, with the May inventory drawdown running at 8.7 million barrels – twice the pace seen since the conflict outbreak.
On the U.S. side, U.S. crude inventories fell quickly this week, though they remain net positive year-to-date. Iran’s floating oil stockpile jumped 65% as the U.S. naval blockade bites, but those barrels can’t get to market through the disruption corridor anyway. Saudi Arabia crude exports sank to record lows per JODI data, with the kingdom being forced to boost fuel oil imports as gas output dips – an extraordinary inversion for the world’s largest crude exporter. Saudi oil export income jumped to a 3.5-year high in March purely on the price effect, masking the volume compression underneath.
The bank revisions are stacking up bullish. UBS raised its September oil forecasts by $10 per barrel to Brent $105 and WTI $97. The bank lifted December and March forecasts by $5 per barrel. UBS flagged that near-term risks remain skewed to the upside and explicitly warned that if the supply disruption continues, Brent could trade above $150 per barrel as scarcity fears trigger hoarding and amplify price moves.
The Bloomberg Intelligence survey of 126 asset managers and energy strategists this week pegged oil to average between $81 and $100 per barrel over the next 12 months, with over 40% citing demand destruction as the single biggest driver of market balancing versus only 13% pointing to OPEC+ spare capacity and 12% saying “nothing will materially offset the disruption.” That’s the consensus view: the only way crude doesn’t spike further is if the global economy breaks under the weight of $100+ oil.
The risk premium itself is now baked in for years. Most survey participants expect a $5-$15 per barrel risk premium to persist medium-term, with some forecasting more than $20. Traders themselves now expect oil to remain above $81 for the next 12 months – a structural reset of expectations versus where the market sat in early Q1.
OPEC+’s response has been measured but not aggressive enough to override the supply shock. Saudi Arabia’s exports continue to fall to record lows. Russia’s flows remain compressed. Nigeria is targeting a 100,000-bpd output increase as global supply disrupts, but that’s marginal relative to the 1 billion-barrel cumulative loss. The bloc still holds meaningful spare capacity, but the political and price calculus argues against rapid release – why would Riyadh flood the market when prices are $30 above where it needs to balance the budget? The supply discipline is structural, and it favors continued tightness through summer.
China is boosting oil stockpiles despite an import plunge, indicating Beijing is reading the same risk and building precautionary inventory. Japan’s crude imports from the Middle East slumped to the lowest on record, with logistics rerouting to alternative suppliers. India is eyeing direct Gulf oil loading despite the Hormuz blockade as it scrambles for security of supply. These are not the actions of buyers expecting oil to drop – they’re the actions of buyers locking in barrels at any price before the next leg higher.
The chart structure is constructive for the longs. WTI (CL=F) at $101.96-$102.06 sits well above the 200-day moving average and inside an established uptrend that has not been meaningfully challenged since late February. The $100 psychological level is acting as defended support. Resistance at $105-$108 is the next test, with the 2026 high near $112 as the structural ceiling. WTI Midland at $102.9 (+3.29%) is leading the U.S. benchmark complex, confirming spot tightness is real.
Brent (BZ=F) at $108.34-$108.76 is rebuilding the $110 handle after Wednesday’s selloff to $105. The immediate resistance sits at $110-$112 (recent highs), with the 2026 peak at $115-$120 as the longer-term target. Support at $105 is the floor that held on Wednesday’s de-escalation rally. The OPEC Basket at $115.4 trades structurally above Brent, reflecting the physical premium for sour crude given refinery configuration shifts. The widening OPEC Basket vs. Brent spread is the cleanest signal that physical market tightness is meaningfully ahead of paper market pricing.
The volatility profile favors continuation. The structure on both Brent and WTI is higher highs and higher lows since the February breakout. Every dip into the lower channel boundary has been bought. Every spike to new highs has consolidated rather than capitulated. That’s the configuration of a market in a confirmed uptrend with structural sponsorship, not a headline-driven squeeze that fades.
The futures curve is in steep backwardation across both benchmarks – front-month contracts trade meaningfully above deferred months. That’s the cleanest signal that physical market tightness is dominating paper positioning. When backwardation is this pronounced, it tells refiners and traders that holding inventory is being penalized – which means inventories will continue to draw and the market is structurally short. The sits around $6-$7, with Brent at the premium reflecting the international supply shock more acutely than the U.S. domestic market, which has some insulation from Hormuz dynamics through shale production.
That’s TradingNEWS

