|

Oil: Hormuz reopening drives staggered supply shock – Societe Generale

Societe Generale analysts Michael Haigh, Ben Hoff and Jeremy Sellem argue that reopening the Strait of Hormuz will unleash a double Oil supply shock into an already tightening market. They stress that logistics and tanker flows, not just upstream capacity, will govern timing, with physical relief for end‑users lagging headline reopening by several weeks.

Double supply shock and delayed relief

"Once the Strait reopens, tanker traffic resumes alongside a parallel release of constrained upstream supply. Two-barrel pools hit simultaneously: crude that physically could not move due to shipping and insurance constraints, and crude that was policy‑constrained by OPEC+ discipline. The UAE will, no doubt, accelerate production, while Saudi Arabia faces a strategic choice—defend aggregate restraint or respond defensively with its own barrels."

"Crucially, this re‑entry occurs while global crude and product stocks are already drawing, amplifying the price and flow impact. While production capacity is the binding constraint at the wellhead, the near‑term throttle is logistics: laden vessels queued on both sides of Hormuz. Facility restarts across the Gulf will not be instantaneous."

"Safety checks, system verification, gradual well ramp‑ups, and recommissioning of surface infrastructure imply weeks to months before nameplate output is restored; Kuwait has cited three to four months even in a best‑case political outcome. As a result, the first visible shock is not supplying growth but the sequencing and timing of barrel delivery into end markets."

"Adding this to shipping normalisation implies 45–50 days from a mid‑May Hormuz reopening to tangible end‑market relief in our base case, stretching to ~60+ days in more conservative scenarios. Bottom line: prices respond immediately to reopening headlines, but physical balance improves much later. This timing mismatch is the central risk for both policymakers and markets."

"Therefore, under our (SG) base case scenario of a reopening in the middle of May (let’s say 15th) tanker normalisation would take until June 24th. The best-case (100% normal flows) would be June 18th and in Kpler’s (worst) scenario it would be July 5th."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD climbs to two-day highs past 1.3200

GBP/USD picks up extra pace and surpasses the 1.3200 threshold on Thursday. That said, Cable manages to shrug off initial weakness and regain balance on the back of the fresh selling pressure hurting the Greenback.

EUR/USD pushes harder; focus is back to 1.1400

EUR/USD’s daily recovery now gathers steam, sending spot to the vicinity of the key 1.1400 barrier on Thursday. The pair’s bounce follows some decent loss of momentum in the US Dollar in the wake of the release of US PCE data and the weekly labour market readings.

Gold bounces from 2026 lows, remains pressured

Gold reverses part of its recent weakness on Thursday, managing to reclaim the area just above the $4,000 mark per troy ounce. The precious metal regains traction on the back of renewed selling interest in the Greenback, although expectations of rate hikes by the Fed are likely to keep buyers on the sidelines for now.

Bitcoin tests $60,000 as whales sell off – Aave and Jupiter show resilience

The broader cryptocurrency market remains under intense selling pressure, with Bitcoin back at $60,000 for the third time this year. On-chain data shows selling pressure from large-wallet investors, commonly referred to as whales, while total liquidations hit nearly $1 billion in 24 hours.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Ripple defend their last line of defenses
The broader cryptocurrency market remains under immense downward pressure as investors' interest shifts toward lucrative AI and memory stocks. Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), and Ripple (XRP) are holding above their June 6 lows, with bulls hoping short-term resilience will ward off sellers.
Regime change: Inside Kevin Warsh's first move to make the Fed unreadable on purpose

The rate did not move. That was the least interesting thing about Kevin Warsh's first meeting in charge of the Fed. The FOMC held its benchmark at 3.50%-3.75% for the fourth straight meeting, exactly as priced, and then the new chair used his first press conference to dismantle the machinery the market has leaned on for a decade.