Analysis: Strait of Hormuz Reopening -- Key Takeaways
6/15 9:36 AM
Analysis: Strait of Hormuz Reopening -- Key Takeaways
Karim Bastati
DTN Analyst
Analysis: Strait of Hormuz Reopening -- Key Takeaways
VIENNA (DTN) -- Oil futures slumped to a three-month low Monday (6/15)
morning after the U.S. and Iran announced they had agreed to an interim deal to
end the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Here are some key takeaways of
what an imminent resumption of oil flows might mean.
Immediate but Short-lived Relief
Around 300 laden tankers are ready to traverse the waterway, and about as
many empty tankers are waiting on the other side and could load within days.
After this initial wave, however, export flows will be slow to return to
pre-war levels given a multitude of logistical constraints, from tanker
availability and voyage times to damaged infrastructure and curbed production.
Before the blockade, around 140 commercial ships transited the chokepoint on
average every day, including tankers transporting some 15 million bpd of crude
oil and 5 million bpd of refined products.
Timing Is Critical
The International Energy Agency has warned that inventories could hit a "red
zone" by July-August should flows not be restored soon. When and at what speed
exports return will be crucial to gauge shortage risks. A restart this weekend,
as suggested by the White House, would come just in time to mitigate the worst
outcomes. Another month of disrupted flows, in contrast, could lead inventories
in some regions near operationally necessary minimums and jeopardize fuel
supply security. The U.S. Energy Information Administration estimates
commercial oil and fuel inventories to fall to 2.56 billion bbl by the end of
June and 2.27 billion bbl by the end of 2026, compared to 2.82 billion bbl at
the beginning of the year. In the U.S., total petroleum inventories have
recently plummeted to their lowest in more than two decades.
Full Recovery Will Take Months
More than 10 million bpd of crude oil production has been forced offline
since the beginning of the war. Many wells will require heavy maintenance and
months of operating before approaching pre-war output levels. Energy
infrastructure which sustained damage during the war will also require repairs,
including oil fields, pipelines, export terminals, and processing plants. At
least two-thirds of curbed Middle Eastern supply could return within three
months, but some production is likely permanently lost.
Bottom Line
Even an immediate reopening will leave the global oil market in a deficit
for months to come, the size of which will depend on how quickly supply chains
can be restored and how much demand has been permanently destroyed. For the
U.S., this means that while exports may ease off their record highs, they are
bound to continue at an elevated rate, with strong international demand drawing
down inventories and adding a premium to otherwise softening fuel prices for
domestic buyers.
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