Executive Summary
- As of April 17–18, 2026, the market has moved from full blockade pricing toward partial-reopening pricing: Brent fell to $90.38/bbl on April 17 and WTI to $83.85/bbl, after truce hopes and some tanker movement through the Strait of Hormuz.
- The key near-term fact is that shipping is not yet normalized. Reuters reported only limited, managed passage, and officials are still pressing for full resumption.
- EIA’s April outlook still assumes a meaningful risk premium: it expects Brent to peak around $115/bbl in Q2 2026 before easing as Hormuz flows resume.
- My base case for the next 3 weeks is range-bound but volatile: Brent $86–$98, WTI $80–$92. That reflects partial reopening, persistent transit risk, and no full return to pre-crisis shipping conditions yet. Supported by current spot moves and EIA’s reopening framework.
- The market is now trading the probability of renewed disruption, not just the disruption itself. Any evidence of stable multi-day tanker flow pushes prices down; any renewed firing, closure language, or failed convoy transit pushes prices up quickly.
Key Drivers
Macro
The market is balancing two opposing forces:
- Geopolitical de-escalation after ceasefire signals.
- Physical supply-chain fragility because Hormuz traffic is only partially restored.
Sector / physical market
Hormuz is the bottleneck. The most important short-term variable is not global demand; it is whether Gulf barrels can move reliably for several consecutive days. Iraq’s restart of exports is constructive, but that only matters if shipping access holds.
Market structure
EIA explicitly says the Brent-WTI spread peaks in April because disruption is largest now, then narrows as flows resume. That matters because Brent remains the cleaner geopolitical benchmark for this event.
Data & Evidence
| Item | Latest signal | Implication for next 3 weeks |
|---|---|---|
| Brent settlement | $90.38/bbl on Apr. 17 | Market has removed some panic premium, but not all. |
| WTI settlement | $83.85/bbl on Apr. 17 | U.S. crude also repriced lower on truce/reopening hopes. |
| Earlier stress point | Brent $109.27, WTI $112.95 on Apr. 7 | Shows how fast prices can re-spike if disruption escalates. |
| Ceasefire repricing | Brent $94.75, WTI $94.41 on Apr. 8 | Initial reopening hope caused sharp downside reset. |
| EIA Q2 Brent outlook | $115/bbl peak in Q2 2026 | Official baseline still embeds elevated geopolitical premium. |
| Shipping status | Limited/managed passage, not full normalization | Keeps near-term volatility high. |
| Export recovery | Iraq says exports from all fields to resume within days | Downside pressure on oil if transit holds. |
Valuation Logic
I am using a short-horizon event-driven framework, not a long-cycle supply-demand valuation.
Base arithmetic
- Current market anchor: Brent around $90, WTI around $84.
- Event premium still embedded because:
- shipping is incomplete, not normalized;
- EIA still assumes elevated Q2 pricing and a gradual easing path, not a snap return to normal.
Interpretation
- If transit reliability improves each day, the market should keep compressing the risk premium.
- But because the Strait is still operationally uncertain, oil is unlikely to fully revert to pre-conflict pricing over just 3 weeks unless there is a clear and durable restoration of shipping.
Risks
Upside risks to oil
- Fresh attacks on shipping or renewed declaration of closure.
- Failure of convoy/transit arrangements.
- Broader escalation involving Iranian export flows or regional infrastructure.
Downside risks to oil
- Several consecutive days of normal tanker movement.
- Confirmed restart of Gulf exports at scale, including Iraq and other producers.
- Market conclusion that worst-case disruption has passed.
Scenarios
Bull case for oil over next 3 weeks
Assumption: managed reopening fails or shipping is interrupted again.
Brent: $100–$115
WTI: $94–$108
Why:
- The market has already shown it can price Brent above $109 and WTI above $112 during peak stress.
- EIA’s Q2 Brent peak assumption near $115 remains a credible upper reference in a renewed disruption case.
Base case
Assumption: partial reopening continues, but shipping remains fragile and uneven.
Brent: $86–$98
WTI: $80–$92
Why:
- This is broadly consistent with Friday’s close, limited passage through Hormuz, and gradual rather than full normalization.
Bear case for oil over next 3 weeks
Assumption: full reopening becomes credible and export restarts broaden.
Brent: $78–$86
WTI: $72–$80
Why:
- Much of the remaining geopolitical premium would compress quickly if market participants believe the shipping corridor is durable again.
- Iraq export normalization would reinforce that view.
What would disprove this base case
My base case is wrong if either of these happens:
- Full, stable Hormuz transit resumes sooner than expected
Then Brent likely breaks below the mid-80s and WTI below $80. - Shipping restrictions re-tighten materially
Then the market likely re-tests the high-$90s to low-$100s for Brent quickly, with WTI following.
Actionable Takeaways
Watch these indicators daily:
- Number of tankers transiting Hormuz without interruption.
- Confirmation that Gulf exports are resuming at scale, especially Iraq.
- Whether official language shifts from “limited/managed passage” to “normal commercial transit.”
- Brent-WTI spread direction; narrowing would support the “reopening is real” thesis.
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