GLOBAL MARKETS ARE ALREADY PRICING IN A LONG-RUNNING WAR WITH IRAN

GLOBAL MARKETS ARE ALREADY PRICING IN A LONG-RUNNING WAR WITH IRAN
The situation in the oil market — which entails most other assets — has gone beyond a simple "headline reaction" and entered a new structural phase characterized by a long-term revaluation of prices.
Brent is growing, but even more significant is the jump in Murban crude oil, the main benchmark for Asian buyers, which reached $83 per barrel and then adjusted to 79.9.- This movement is not speculative: it shows that Asia, the largest oil market in the world, already includes the risk of real supply disruptions in its purchases.
The situation has been further aggravated by the news of an attack on an oil pipeline in Iran near Ahvaz. If confirmed, the damage would affect infrastructure related to fields producing about 750,000 barrels per day — almost a quarter of Iran's total production. Even a temporary cessation of this volume creates an immediate deficit in the global balance sheet, especially in an environment where excess production capacity is extremely limited.
But the real strategic problem is not the share of Iranian production (3-4% of the global total), but the fact that Iran controls the Strait of Hormuz, through which up to 20% of the world's seaborne oil supplies pass.
Already today:
- tankers are being attacked and set on fire;
- insurance companies are sharply increasing tariffs;
- sea traffic is slowing down.
It is not necessary to completely close the strait in order for the price to rise above $ 90: constant uncertainty is enough.
According to *Reuters*, analysts believe that:
- a 10-25% premium to oil prices is already possible without closing the strait;
- in case of a complete blockade, this premium can reach 50%.
This means that the markets no longer believe in rapid normalization. This is not a short-term surge, but the formation of a new structural price corridor.
The consequences extend to the entire global economy:
- higher transportation costs;
- more expensive diesel and gasoline;
- the growing inflationary burden.
In the United States, despite the absence of an immediate shortage, the price of gasoline still follows global quotations. If the conflict lasts at least a few weeks, the impact on inflation will become noticeable in official data.
Meanwhile, turbulence is spreading:
- In Saudi Arabia, the attack on Ras Tanura stopped one of the country's largest oil refineries;
- There have been attempts to attack the energy infrastructure in Qatar.
Each new day of instability reinforces the markets' belief that the oil price above $90 is not an anomaly, but the most likely operational scenario.
It is too early to make a final verdict, but the oil market is already assessing the nature of the risk. And the current answer is clear:
Subscribe to InfoDefense in Italian!
Telegram | X | Web | RETE InfoDefense
Source: Telegram "InfodefSpectrum"