Analysis
Oil Prices Surge as Iran War Escalates: Brent Crude Hits $108, on Track for Record Single-Day Jump
Supply cuts, Hormuz shipping fears, and a widening Middle East conflict are driving crude toward territory not seen since 2022 — and the economic aftershocks are only beginning.
Brent crude futures climbed $15.51, or 16.7%, to $108.20 a barrel on Monday, while US West Texas Intermediate rose $14.23, or 15.7%, to $105.13 — levels unseen since mid-2022, and prices that, if sustained through the close, would mark the largest single-day percentage gain in the modern history of crude benchmarks. The catalyst is neither OPEC politics nor a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico. It is war.
The expanding US-Israeli military confrontation with Iran — now entering what analysts describe as its most destabilising phase — has injected a risk premium into global energy markets that paper traders, physical buyers, and sovereign wealth funds alike are scrambling to price. Oil pared some of its earlier highs by midday in London, a modest retreat that disciplined traders read not as relief but as the natural breath of a market absorbing something genuinely unprecedented.
Why This Surge Is Different From Every Previous Middle East Flare-Up
Students of the oil market are accustomed to the ritual: missiles fly, crude spikes, diplomats talk, prices retreat. The pattern held through the 2019 Abqaiq attack on Saudi Aramco’s infrastructure, through the 2020 killing of Qasem Soleimani, and through a dozen lesser crises over the past decade.
This time, three structural factors make the calculus profoundly different.
First, major producers have already cut supply. OPEC+ entered this crisis with output voluntarily restrained, meaning there is limited spare capacity to cushion a physical disruption — a point underscored in the IEA’s most recent Oil Market Report, which flagged historically thin global buffers.
Second, the conflict’s geography touches the Strait of Hormuz directly. Approximately 21 million barrels of crude pass through that 33-kilometre chokepoint every day — roughly one-fifth of global consumption. Iranian naval doctrine has long included the option of mining or blockading the strait in extremis, and analysts at Argus Media have warned for months that even a partial disruption lasting two to three weeks could drain OECD commercial inventories to critically low levels.
Third, shipping insurance markets are already responding. War-risk premiums on tankers transiting the Persian Gulf have surged to levels not seen since the 1980s Tanker War, according to underwriters at Lloyd’s. Vessel operators are rerouting around the Gulf of Oman where possible — adding days and cost to journeys that Asian refiners have long taken for granted.
The Asian Importer Problem: Most Exposed, Least Hedged
No region of the world is more structurally vulnerable to a sustained Hormuz disruption than Asia. Japan, South Korea, India, and China collectively import the overwhelming majority of their crude from the Gulf — a dependency built over decades of cost-optimised supply chains that assumed geopolitical stability as a given.
Japanese refiners, operating under long-term contract structures that offer some price protection, are nonetheless exposed to spot market tightness when tanker availability collapses. South Korean petrochemical complexes, among the world’s most sophisticated, are built around a steady diet of Arab Light and Kuwait Export Crude that has no obvious short-term substitute. India, which has in recent years diversified toward discounted Russian Urals, still draws significant volumes from the Gulf and faces its own logistical constraints.
China presents the most complex picture. Beijing holds the world’s largest strategic petroleum reserve, which independent analysts at Kpler estimate could cover roughly 90 days of net import needs at current drawdown rates. That buffer buys time — but not indefinitely — and Chinese refiners scrambling for replacement barrels from West Africa or Latin America would face significant freight cost increases that would erode the margin advantage they currently enjoy.
The macro effect: inflation imported from the energy complex, at precisely the moment Asian central banks believed they had wrestled domestic price pressures under control.
The Road to $120: Scenarios and Probabilities
Commodity desks from Goldman Sachs to BNP Paribas have in recent weeks published scenario analyses suggesting Brent could reach $120 to $130 per barrel if the Hormuz strait is even partially obstructed. A full closure — which Iran has threatened but never executed — would, in most models, push prices toward $150 or beyond, a level that historical precedent suggests would trigger demand destruction across the global economy.
Monday’s rally, though dramatic, still prices in only a partial risk premium. Markets are not yet trading a closure; they are trading the credible possibility of one. That distinction matters enormously.
Key variables the market is watching:
- Duration of active hostilities: A contained exchange followed by ceasefire negotiations would likely see Brent retrace toward $90. A multi-week campaign, particularly one involving Iranian strikes on regional infrastructure, changes the calculus entirely.
- US strategic petroleum reserve deployment: The Biden and Trump administrations have both used SPR releases as a political tool during price spikes. A coordinated IEA release could provide short-term relief — though the IEA’s own guidance suggests member states’ reserve levels have not fully recovered from previous drawdowns.
- US shale response time: American tight oil producers can accelerate output, but the supply response typically takes six to nine months to materialise at scale — cold comfort to a market in acute distress today.
At the Pump: The Human Arithmetic of $108 Oil
The gap between a barrel of Brent crude and the price a commuter pays at a filling station in Manchester, Mumbai, or Minneapolis is not fixed — it is shaped by refinery margins, taxes, retail competition, and currency effects. But at $108 per barrel, the direction of travel for retail fuel prices is unambiguous.
In the United States, where the American Automobile Association tracks retail gasoline in real time, analysts expect the national average to breach $4.00 per gallon within days if futures hold at current levels — a threshold that past polling consistently identifies as the point at which consumers begin visibly altering behaviour: cancelling discretionary road trips, accelerating electric vehicle enquiries, and cutting spending elsewhere.
In Europe, where fuel is already heavily taxed and prices are denominated in euros, the inflationary pass-through is somewhat muted at the retail level but amplified through industrial energy costs. Airlines, petrochemical producers, and logistics companies face immediate margin compression.
For airlines specifically, jet fuel typically represents 20 to 25 percent of operating costs in normal conditions. At current crude levels — and jet fuel commands a premium over crude — that ratio climbs sharply. IATA, the industry’s global body, had projected a return to comfortable profitability for the sector in 2026; those projections are being quietly revised.
Central Banks, Inflation, and the Policy Bind
For monetary policymakers, an oil shock of this magnitude at this juncture is the scenario they hoped to avoid. The Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank, and the Bank of England have spent the better part of three years battling inflation driven in part by the 2021–2022 commodity super-cycle. Having largely succeeded, they are now staring at a potential re-ignition from the supply side — and supply-side inflation is, by definition, something interest rates cannot efficiently address.
The bind is acute: raise rates to signal inflation-fighting resolve, and risk choking off a recovery still tender in several major economies. Hold rates, and risk un-anchoring inflation expectations that took painful years to re-establish.
ECB board members speaking this month had already flagged geopolitical energy risk as the primary tail scenario in their projections. That tail has, as of Monday morning, arrived.
What Comes Next: A Forward Look for Households, Airlines, and Markets
The honest answer, which professional forecasters are reluctant to offer but which the evidence demands, is that uncertainty is now the dominant variable. The range of plausible outcomes — from a rapid ceasefire that allows prices to retrace to $85, to a prolonged conflict that sustains crude above $110 for months — is wider than at any point since the COVID-19 demand collapse of 2020.
What can be said with confidence:
- Households in fuel-import-dependent economies face a material squeeze on disposable income beginning this quarter, with the lowest-income deciles hardest hit as a share of spending.
- Airlines will begin passing costs through within weeks, with surcharges on long-haul routes appearing first, followed by broader fare increases if oil remains elevated.
- Central banks will be slower to cut rates than markets had priced, with rate-cut expectations for mid-2026 across the G7 now requiring significant reassessment.
- Asian sovereign buyers will accelerate their already-underway diversification strategies — both toward non-Gulf suppliers and, at a structural level, toward domestic renewable capacity.
The oil market’s message on Monday was neither hysterical nor irrational. It was the sound of the world repricing risk it had chosen, for too long, to ignore.