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Physical Oil Surges on Gulf Blockade
Abstract:Crude benchmarks reprice sharply as severe logistics disruptions in the Gulf force major banks to upgrade their 2026 oil targets.

Crude oil benchmarks are trading near $120 a barrel, but the actual cost of physical delivery has completely disjointed from paper markets. An almost complete shutdown of maritime transit in the Gulf has forced physical Dubai crude to clear above $160 a barrel. This severe pricing disconnect introduces an immediate inflationary shock just as financial markets expected central banks to ease interest rates.
What Changed
Ordinarily, paper benchmarks and physical spot prices track closely. Today, that relationship is broken. While Brent and West Texas Intermediate futures recently approached $120 a barrel, buyers needing actual barrels in hand are paying a steep premium. Transactions for physical Dubai crude are clearing between $150 and $166 a barrel.
This divergence shows that financial markets and physical supply chains are currently operating under different pressures. Paper contracts reflect standard market logic that supply disruptions eventually resolve, while the spot market reflects a sudden and immediate lack of available crude.
What Is Driving It
Logistics failures in the Gulf region are entirely driving the physical shortage. Traditional shipping routes through the Strait of Hormuz are closed to maritime traffic. Strategists at Rabobank note that the structural damage to global energy flows is deeper than markets initially expected, with current models showing the primary shipping corridor remaining offline through the end of April.
Even when transit resumes, the recovery of crude and refined product volumes will be slow. Industry estimates project that shipping capacity will reach only 80% of normal baseline levels by late August. This extended disruption forces traders to price in a longer period of physical tightness than earlier estimates suggested.
Because physical supply is restricted, analysts are rewriting their fundamental models to include a higher risk premium for the coming years. A recent client note from Rabobank strategists adjusted their baseline models upward, setting an average Brent price of $107 a barrel for the second quarter of 2026 and increasing estimates all the way into 2027.
Why It Matters
Sustained high oil prices directly challenge the current disinflation narrative in bond markets. Expensive crude acts as a tax on global consumption, placing heavy strain on energy importers like the Eurozone and Japan. For fixed income and foreign exchange desks, this physical energy shock limits the ability of central banks to cut interest rates, while immediately boosting the currencies of commodity exporters like Canada and Norway.
Written by: Justin Gao


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