The 24-Hour Energy Shock the World Wasn’t Ready For

Strikes, tanker attacks, and a silent Hormuz push Brent to $84, with $90 oil now firmly in sight. The Hormuz Closure That No One Wants to Talk About – The Israel-US-Iran conflict engulfing most of the Persian Gulf has pushed $10 per barrel higher, LNG prices went up by $15 per MMBtu, and key refined…


The 24-Hour Energy Shock the World Wasn’t Ready For
The 24-Hour Energy Shock the World Wasn’t Ready For

Strikes, tanker attacks, and a silent Hormuz push Brent to $84, with $90 oil now firmly in sight.

The Hormuz Closure That No One Wants to Talk About

– The Israel-US-Iran conflict engulfing most of the Persian Gulf has pushed $10 per barrel higher, LNG prices went up by $15 per MMBtu, and key refined products such as diesel and jet have been spiralling out of control throughout the Atlantic Basin.
 
– Whilst market watchers almost unanimously define the closure of the Strait of Hormuz as the main bullish factor ahead, very few have, in fact, noted that the Strait has been closed for the past two days.

– There have been no crude oil or LNG transits via the Strait of Hormuz on March 2-3, with dozens of fully loaded ships expecting the end of the regional conflagration, anchored across the Persian Gulf.

– The US Central Command, seeking to placate fears, stated today that the Strait of Hormuz is ‘not closed despite statements by Iranian officials’, even as Saudi Arabia officially announced that it would move all its oil exports to the Red Sea, in avoidance of Hormuz.

– According to Kpler, there are already 55 fully loaded VLCC tankers in the Gulf, up by 18 ships since Israel’s initial attack on Iran that took place on February 28.


Market Movers

– UK-based energy major Shell (LON:SHEL) is reportedly considering selling its minority stake in Australia’s North West Shelf LNG project, potentially garnering $24 billion for the sale as both ADNOC and MidOcean Energy declared interest.

– Angola’s national oil firm Sonangol is moving ahead with its plans for an initial public offering, completing debt sales and establishing an investor relations office as 30% of its shares could be offered in the IPO.

– Norway’s state-controlled Equinor (NYSE:EQNR) is reportedly looking to divest its Angolan assets, building on its 2024 exits from Azerbaijan and Nigeria, seeing quicker returns in Brazil and US deepwater.

– Global trading giant Trafigura signed a 5-year LNG term supply contract with US developer Venture Global (NYSE:VG) starting from Q2 2026, the latter’s first mid-term deal concluded since its arbitration deals with Shell, BP and Repsol.

Tuesday, March 03, 2026

Events are escalating with unprecedented speed across the Middle East. Drone strikes on Saudi Arabia’s largest refinery, strikes on the world’s largest liquefaction facility in Qatar, the bombing of several tankers, widespread insurance policy cancellations – all that would be usually scattered across several months in a normal year; however, in 2026, that’s just one day’s worth of action. With the Strait of Hormuz seeing no navigation for several days already, ICE Brent is up at $84 per barrel, and it could very well test the $90 per barrel if the pressure on Gulf producers increases.

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