The shrinking oil supply caused by the disruption of shipments in the Strait of Hormuz raises the risk of broader price spikes in the U.S., The Wall Street Journal writes. Some buyers, in fact, are paying as much as $160 a barrel for oil for those shipments that can get through the strait.
It’s already reshaping trade patterns, as Asian refiners scramble for alternative supplies from the U.S., Europe and Latin America, driving up prices worldwide. Traders warn the current spike could foreshadow broader market tightening if the disruption persists.
While benchmark prices have been volatile amid shifting signals on U.S.-Iran tensions, analysts say any sustained outage could send costs cascading globally. Even if flows resume, a full reset would likely require production increases and sanctions relief.
In the meantime, distorted pricing, thin trading and logistical bottlenecks are creating a fragmented market—one where traditional benchmarks no longer fully reflect real-world supply stress.


