Realized Hormuz disruption, not tail-risk pricing — Brent has bled from $101 to ~$87 as the war premium decays, while physical tightness (7.5 mb/d shut-ins) holds the floor. The desk decomposes the premium, not just the price.
The call: we are in a realized Hormuz-disruption regime — 7.5 mb/d shut-in March 2026, 9.1 mb/d expected April — with a decaying war-risk premium (Brent $101 → ~$87). The desk decomposes the premium into its speculative track (OVX, COT) and its physical track (freight, bypass throughput, EIA weekly balance). Medium confidence
Read the regime →In short — the regime is realized partial Hormuz disruption with a decaying war-risk premium; the desk decomposes the premium, not just the price. Open Deep ↓
The Commodities and Energy desk is in a realized Hormuz-disruption regime — not a tail-risk pricing regime. EIA has confirmed 7.5 mb/d of Gulf export shut-ins in March 2026, with 9.1 mb/d expected in April, across Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, Qatar, and Bahrain. High confidence
Brent at $101 on 3 June falling to approximately $87 by 12 June is a premium-bleed story, not a fundamentals reversal. [DIR] A purely realized supply loss of this magnitude would hold prices higher or grind them upward — not bleed them down. The bleed reflects ceasefire diplomacy and US–Iran talks decaying the speculative overlay on top of the genuine physical loss. The physical tightness sets the floor; sentiment sets how far above it prices trade.
The causal mechanism is precise: probability-weighted closure risk is unwinding faster than the realized barrel loss is biting. [DIR] The market is not disputing the barrel loss — it is revising downward the probability that the closure persists long enough to matter at inventory floors. That distinction is the analytical core of this regime. A falsifier: if EIA shut-in numbers rise above 10 mb/d, or if war-risk insurers withdraw cover a second time, the mechanism runs in reverse.
This desk maintains a strict two-data-layer discipline: the two Brent figures below answer different questions and must never appear side by side without clear attribution.
The observed price is not a single number — it is a stack of four distinct components. Working through the arithmetic tells you exactly what probability of closure the market is embedding. [DIR]
The shorthand for this regime: a coiled spring in both directions. [DIR] The premium is cheap relative to barrels actually lost (9+ mb/d off — worse than Abqaiq's 5.7 mb/d and roughly twice 1990's 4.5–5.0 mb/d) but expensive relative to a market pricing rapid resolution. A ceasefire that holds compresses the spring toward $70–75; a closure that persists past six weeks releases it toward $120–150+. Both directions are live.
WTI detail [HARD T1, FRED DCOILWTICO]: $95.00 official (8 Jun 2026) / ~$84.88 live (12 Jun futures). Brent–WTI $2.46 official / ~$2.45 live — a normal Atlantic Basin differential, present and unchanged by the shock. The spread is not the story here; the absolute level of both benchmarks relative to pre-war is.
OVX 56.30 [HARD T1, FRED OVXCLS, 11 Jun] is the same war premium expressed in volatility space. Above 50 means options are still pricing crisis-grade moves — the equivalent of the options market saying "we don't know which way this breaks." Below 40 would signal a de-escalation regime.
The 56 print is analytically revealing: a full-closure scenario modelled bottom-up on historical Hormuz comparables would push OVX into the 60–90+ range [DIR].
The gap between 56 and that projection is the signal — the market is not yet pricing the bimodal extreme. It is a warning, not a comfort.
FRED DCOILBRENTEU · DCOILWTICO · OVXCLS · EIA Hormuz closure outlook · EIA STEO T1
In short — backwardation is the cleanest physical-tightness gauge; OVX is the premium expressed in vol-space. Open Deep ↓
When buyers are willing to pay a premium for barrels delivered now versus barrels delivered next month, the futures curve is in backwardation — the market's clearest signal of real, near-term physical scarcity. The inverse, contango (next month costs more than now), signals oversupply or abundant inventory. OVX 56 is the same war premium re-expressed in volatility space: the options market's estimate of how violently Brent could move.
The Brent prompt spread (M1 minus M2, the front-month contract versus the next) provides the physical-tightness spine of this desk. Three data points bracket the story [DIR/HARD-vendor source_identified T3, Yahoo Finance / TheStreet — no official free real-time series; for a free proxy, compare the FRED DCOILBRENTEU spot trajectory against the EIA STEO forward path, which approximates the curve slope without a live feed]:
The three-point spread decoder is not just a record — it is a decision tool. When M1–M2 returns toward its pre-war resting level of ~+$0.24/bbl and visible loading volumes recover, the fast-fade camp is winning: the physical shock is clearing faster than the scarce-barrel premium suggested. When Brent is falling on ceasefire headlines but backwardation stays elevated and OVX holds above 50, the slow-fade camp is winning: paper prices are moving on diplomacy while the physical supply chain remains impaired. Use the spread to separate what the screen says from what the physical market says. [DIR; Yahoo Finance / TheStreet prompt-spread data; EIA Today in Energy on backwardation; source_identified T3]
OVX at 56.30 [HARD T1, FRED OVXCLS, 11 Jun] sits below the 60–90+ range a full-closure bottom-up model would predict [DIR], consistent with the ceasefire-bleed narrative dominating current sentiment. The analytically meaningful fact is not that OVX is at 56 — it is that OVX has not moved to 80+, even as the realized shut-in volumes (7.5 mb/d March, 9.1 mb/d expected April) remain large. The bimodal extreme — a sustained full closure — is priced as a real possibility but not the dominant scenario. OVX breaking above 65–70 on renewed escalation would be the first structural signal that market pricing is migrating toward the aggressive-camp scenarios.
Context that makes 56 analytical rather than merely descriptive: the CBOE Crude Oil Volatility Index (OVXCLS, FRED) printed 33.7 in August 2025 [HARD T1, Trading Economics / FRED OVXCLS] — its pre-shock baseline. The current 56 therefore represents a 66% elevation in implied vol above that resting state, sustained even after Brent fell ~$14/bbl from its early-June peak. That combination — price down, vol still up — is the market's expression of unresolved bimodal risk: if the physical shock is merely fading, OVX should follow Brent lower; that it has not is the options market's honest admission that a renewed-closure tail remains live.
A second structure indicator: the 3-month/12-month curve slope. The M1–M2 prompt spread captures tightness in the very near term. A second read comes from comparing the 3-month Brent price against the 12-month — a slope that spans the range of plausible diplomatic outcomes. Steep 3m/12m backwardation signals markets believe scarcity is an immediate problem even if they expect flows to normalise over the year; a flattening slope (or flip toward 12m below 3m at a narrowing discount) means the market is beginning to price resolution within the scenario window. Because no free real-time curve series exists, the nearest free proxy is to compare the FRED DCOILBRENTEU spot reading against the EIA STEO's 2026-average and 2027-average Brent paths: the STEO's 2026 average of $78.84/bbl [HARD T1, EIA STEO] against a live ~$87/bbl spot implies the market and EIA are in rough agreement on annual-average resolution, with the current premium representing the near-term shock rather than a structural repricing. [DIR T3/T1]
Backwardation (the current state): buyers pay a premium for prompt delivery because physical barrels are scarce now — inventory holders are paid to release stock rather than store it. The roll yield for long futures positions is positive. Contango (the opposite): deferred contracts trade above spot, signalling a glut or ample storage supply — holders are paid to carry inventory forward, and long futures positions face a roll cost. The structural watch rule for this desk: if the Brent curve flips from backwardation into contango across the front of the strip, the physical Hormuz shock has resolved. A ceasefire press conference is not sufficient; the curve is. Contango would confirm that barrels are actually reaching buyers, inventories are replenishing, and the scarcity premium has exhausted its physical foundation. Until that happens, any fall in Brent that leaves the curve in backwardation is a speculative-premium bleed, not a fundamental resolution. [DIR; EIA Today in Energy on backwardation as physical-tightness gauge; BrentChart contango/backwardation primer; T3]
Brent M1–M2 spread: Yahoo Finance / TheStreet (source_identified, no official free series) · FRED OVXCLS (free, CBOE-sourced) · OVX pre-shock baseline: FRED OVXCLS Aug 2025 · EIA STEO forward path (free) T1/T3
In short — current premium (~$15–25/bbl over pre-war ~$64–78) decomposes into a speculative track (OVX, COT) and a physical track (bypass, SPR, inventory draws). Open Deep ↓
Brent at approximately $87 [HARD source_identified T2] carries an estimated $15–25/bbl war premium [DIR] over the pre-war ~$64–78 range. That premium is not a monolith — it is a coiled spring with two distinct components that decay at different speeds and respond to different catalysts.
Five sell-side positions span a $65–$150+ range. They diverge because they model different duration and mitigation assumptions — averaging them produces a figure no institution actually holds. The five camps are presented as they stand:
| Bank / camp | Price scenario | Mechanism & duration assumption | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| HSBC — conservative | ~$80/bbl on closure; ~$65–67/bbl if no interruption materialises | Assumes OPEC spare capacity, bypass pipelines, and SPR releases cap the effective loss. The no-interruption path (~$65–67) is HSBC's base case for a ceasefire that holds; the closure path (~$80) assumes a brief, manageable disruption with functioning mitigation. Duration assumption: closure short-lived, mitigation effective within weeks. | T3 [DIR] HSBC per Reuters; a bank scenario, not primary research |
| Goldman Sachs — central-conservative | +$15/bbl for 1-month full closure → +$12/bbl with ~4 mb/d bypass → +$10/bbl with bypass + 2 mb/d SPR draw | Three explicit mitigation levers, each modelled separately: (1) full closure baseline +$15/bbl; (2) deduct ~$3/bbl for approximately 4 mb/d of pipeline bypass routed around the strait, yielding ~+$12/bbl; (3) deduct a further ~$2/bbl for a concurrent 2 mb/d SPR draw from IEA members, yielding ~+$10/bbl net. The model is linear — each lever is additive and functions as advertised. Conservative because it assumes bypass capacity is real and reachable, SPR release is coordinated quickly, and the closure does not persist long enough to stress inventory floors. Duration assumption: closure contained within approximately one month. | T3 [DIR] Goldman per Reuters; a bank scenario, not primary research |
| Citi — central | ~$90+ Brent on sustained disruption | Mid-range estimate: higher than Goldman because it allows for greater demand inelasticity in the near term and for partial bypass-capacity failure, but does not model the full inventory-stress nonlinearity that drives JPMorgan to $120–150. Duration assumption: disruption persists beyond a few weeks, mitigation partially effective. | T3 [DIR] Citi per Business Standard; a bank scenario, not primary research |
| JPMorgan — aggressive | $120–130/bbl persistent blockade; $150+ overshoot if closure persists into Q3 | Non-linear inventory-stress model: assumes a prolonged closure depletes strategic reserves and forces demand destruction as the balancing mechanism, causing markets to overshoot before equilibrating. At $150+ the market is pricing physical rationing, not just scarcity. Duration assumption: closure persists well past the point where SPR and bypass headroom is exhausted — 8+ weeks of near-total disruption. | T3 [DIR] JPMorgan per OilPrice.com |
| RBC Capital Markets — most aggressive | Above 2022 highs ($139 Brent), toward 2008 peak (~$147) | Mechanical-reopening skeptic. The cumulative-barrels mechanism: 12.5 mb/d of sustained shut-ins, if maintained through month-end, would represent a cumulative loss exceeding one billion barrels — a structural threshold that global strategic stocks cannot absorb without permanent demand rationing. RBC argues that no orderly reopening is achievable without multi-week logistics normalisation of tankers, crew, and insurance, meaning a ceasefire headline alone does not restore barrels. Duration assumption: 8+ weeks of near-total disruption with impaired reopening even after a political settlement. | T3 [DIR] RBC Capital Markets, May 2026 |
The $65-to-$150+ spread is not a data disagreement — it is a duration-and-reachability argument. [DIR] Everyone agrees approximately 15 mb/d of seaborne supply is at risk. The camps disagree on (a) how long the closure persists, (b) how much spare capacity and bypass is real and reachable in the closure scenario, and (c) when inventory floors force the response to go non-linear. Goldman's model applies to a brief, contained closure with fully functioning mitigation. Citi opens the door to partial failure. JPMorgan and RBC assume a closure that persists long enough to overwhelm all conventional offsets and force demand-side adjustment.
The agency data point [HARD T1, EIA Hormuz closure outlook]: EIA's own short-term energy outlook Q2 Hormuz-disruption sensitivity puts Brent near approximately $115/bbl in the disruption scenario — providing the primary-source anchor bracketed by Goldman on the low end and JPMorgan/RBC on the high end. The EIA $115 figure is not a forecast; it is the agency's own modelled sensitivity for a Q2 sustained disruption, a different and more conservative exercise than the sell-side bank scenarios but grounded in EIA's own supply-demand balance model. That it sits between the central and aggressive camps confirms the range is analytically coherent, not outlier-driven.
The historical record supports this framing: the Abqaiq 2019 shock (5.7 mb/d off, +$7/bbl, round-tripped in ~2 weeks) confirms even very large outages decay fast if short; the 1990 Gulf War (~4.5–5.0 mb/d off, prices roughly doubled, faded pre-war by early 1991) and 2022 Russia ($139 Brent peak, sticky $30–50 premium for months) confirm sustained multi-mb/d loss holds the premium for much longer. [HARD, T1 primary sources]
The five-camp spectrum collapses to a duration question. Match the observable closure timeline to the relevant camp:
The premium-is-cheap arithmetic: [DIR] EIA's own shut-in numbers — 7.5 mb/d in March and 9.1 mb/d expected in April — already exceed Abqaiq's 5.7 mb/d loss and are roughly twice the 4.5–5.0 mb/d removed in the 1990 Gulf War. Yet Brent is trading near ~$87, barely above HSBC's $80 closure ceiling and well below the EIA STEO's own $115 Q2 sensitivity. On a realized-barrels-per-dollar-of-premium basis, the market looks cheap relative to what history would imply for a loss of this magnitude — the only coherent explanation is that the market is applying an overwhelmingly heavy weight to the assumption that the closure is short-lived. If that assumption is wrong by even a few weeks, the premium has substantial room to reprice upward even within the conservative camp. [DIR]
EIA STEO normalization path [HARD T1, EIA STEO March 2026]: Brent 2026 average $78.84/bbl; Brent 2027 average $64.47/bbl. These are the agency's central estimates assuming partial normalization over the forecast horizon. A price above $100 sustained into 2026 requires persistent physical loss — not just balance-sheet support from the current premium. The STEO path is the de-escalation endpoint: $78.84 implies partial but meaningful recovery in Gulf export capacity, not a return to the pre-war $64–78 range in 2026. $64.47 in 2027 implies near-full normalization. Both figures should be held against real-time EIA shut-in volumes as the primary falsification test.
EIA STEO March 2026 · EIA Hormuz closure outlook (Q2 disruption sensitivity, T1) · Goldman Sachs per Reuters (T3) · HSBC per Reuters (T3) · Citi per Business Standard (T3) · JPMorgan per OilPrice.com (T3) · RBC Capital Markets May 2026 (T3) T1/T3
In short — EIA balance sheet: US crude stocks 426.5 Mbbl, production 13.8 mb/d, refinery util 95.3%; OPEC+ spare capacity is contested (EIA 3.16 / IEA ~4 / skeptics 1.5–2.5 mb/d deployable — stranded-spare caveat is the key). Open Deep ↓
The US physical balance sheet — the most reliable weekly window into real supply/demand — shows a market running hot on both the production and refinery side, with drawing inventories confirming genuine near-term tightness. [HARD T1, EIA Weekly Petroleum Status, week of 5 Jun 2026]
Before the Hormuz closure, the market was in a structurally soft position: IEA pegged 2025 global demand at approximately 103.9 mb/d [HARD T2, IEA] and described the balance as "balanced-to-soft" — meaning the disruption landed on a market with limited tightness to absorb it, not one that was already strained. The shock is entirely supply-driven; underlying demand has not surged. [DIR T2]
EIA's March 2026 STEO projects global production outpacing consumption by approximately +1.87 mb/d in 2026 once Hormuz flows reestablish — a meaningful inventory build that implies the market is structurally oversupplied ex-disruption. The same STEO shows 2026 Brent averaging $78.84/bbl and 2027 Brent at $64.47/bbl in its reestablishment path, consistent with an oversupplied ex-Hormuz balance into 2027. [HARD T1, EIA STEO March 2026]
This creates a structural contradiction that is central to reading the current tape: ex-Hormuz, the market is oversupplied into 2027; through-Hormuz, the market is acutely short as barrels trapped behind the chokepoint force rolling shut-ins when regional storage fills. The same barrel is simultaneously in excess (from a global-balance perspective) and unavailable (from a seaborne-delivery perspective). This is why price and inventory signals can point in opposite directions depending on where you look. [DIR T1]
OPEC+ spare capacity is quoted as a single number in most coverage. This desk shows all four estimates — they measure different things and must not be averaged or treated as a range:
The critical caveat: most OPEC+ spare capacity sits inside the Gulf — in Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, and UAE — and is partly or wholly unreachable in the very closure scenario it would be needed for. The stranded fraction is not a rounding error; it is the primary reason the left tail of the price distribution is fatter than a headline 3–4 mb/d spare figure implies. Saudi Arabia's Abqaiq and Yanbu pipelines offer some overland bypass, but as noted in §3, EIA estimates at most ~2.6 mb/d of usable bypass capacity — a fraction of a potential 9+ mb/d shut-in. [HARD T1, EIA Hormuz chokepoint note]
EIA Open Data API WCESTUS1 · WCRFPUS2 · WPULEUS3 · WGTSTUS1 (weekly Wed) · EIA STEO March 2026 · IEA OMR Sep-2025 · Energy Aspects/Rapidan (T3) · EIA Hormuz chokepoint note T1/T2/T3
In short — Brent–WTI spread ($2.46 official); Henry Hub $3.10 structurally insulated (net LNG exporter); copper $13,484/t (Dr Copper growth read); ag balances: corn 281, wheat 275, soy 125 million metric tons. Open Deep ↓
Commodities do not move as a bloc. The Hormuz shock is primarily an oil-and-LNG event; its effects on gas, metals, and agricultural commodities are second-order, indirect, and in some cases counterintuitive. The six-segment read below is the starting point for understanding what is actually being priced — and what is not. [DIR]
| Segment | Value & source | The read | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crude: Brent–WTI spread | $2.46/bbl (8 Jun official, FRED DCOILBRENTEU / DCOILWTICO) [HARD T1] | An Atlantic-basin premium is present and normal. Brent trades above WTI because it reflects a tighter seaborne market; WTI is landlocked and shale-buffered. The spread is not the current story — it is confirming that the Brent premium is geographically rational, not a spread aberration requiring explanation. The directional context: in Gulf-stress episodes the spread typically runs wider, at around $3–4/bbl, as Brent captures the full seaborne-supply risk while WTI insulation holds. The current $2.46 is below that historical Gulf-stress baseline — meaning WTI is tracking Brent down on ceasefire sentiment rather than decoupling upward [DIR]. Watch: a widening Brent–WTI spread would confirm that Brent is repricing renewed physical tightness while US domestic supply holds; a compressed spread would suggest the market is pricing the de-escalation path and both benchmarks are converging on fair value. [DIR] The "one global pool" principle applies to US exposure: the US imports roughly 0.5 mb/d through Hormuz — approximately 7% of US crude imports and around 2% of US petroleum consumption [HARD, EIA Hormuz closure outlook]. That direct dependence is modest. But oil is priced globally; in 1990, when the US imported far more Gulf crude, the Gulf War disruption added an estimated 4–14¢/gal to US pump prices within days of the shock — not because US supply was physically cut but because world benchmark prices moved and domestic retail follows [HARD, Hamilton oil shocks paper (UCSD)]. Energy independence buffers the supply channel; it does not insulate from the price channel. [DIR] | T1 [HARD/DIR] |
| Gas: Henry Hub | $3.10/MMBtu (8 Jun FRED DHHNGSP) [HARD T1]; $3.44/MMBtu watch level [DIR T3] | US gas is structurally insulated from the Hormuz shock. The US is a net LNG exporter; a global LNG squeeze — which the Hormuz disruption has created by blocking ~20% of global LNG flows — is bullish for US Henry Hub gas via the export-pull mechanism: Asian and European buyers bid more for US LNG cargoes, tightening the US domestic market. The correct read is not "$3.10 = gas is cheap and calm" but "$3.10 and rising on export pull = the LNG shock is transmitting into US domestic gas prices, not away from them." The mechanism deserves precision. Export pull works as follows: when Asian JKM prices spike on Gulf LNG disruption, US LNG terminals run at capacity to capture the arbitrage; that draws down US natural gas storage and pipeline supply faster than domestic production can offset; Henry Hub therefore rises even though no US domestic supply is disrupted. The transmission direction is inward, not outward — global LNG tightness pulls US domestic prices up via the export route. This is the opposite of how most readers expect the logic to run. [DIR, EIA Hormuz closure outlook] The $3.44/MMBtu level is a directional watch: if Henry Hub moves toward and through that level it would suggest the export-pull tightening is gaining force and the LNG premium is transmitting meaningfully into the US domestic gas market. The upper print may already partially reflect this dynamic. [DIR] | T1 [HARD] |
| Products: crack spreads & US gasoline retail | US regular gasoline: $4.146/gal (8 Jun FRED GASREGW) [HARD T1] 3-2-1 crack spread: construct from EIA product/crude spot [source_identified T2, no-free-feed real-time] | The consumer and political pain tile. Retail gasoline lags crude oil by roughly 1–2 weeks as changes in the crude cost work through the refinery–distribution–retail chain. At $4.146/gal the US pump price is elevated and politically sensitive. The pass-through arithmetic: a $10/bbl Brent move translates to approximately 2.4¢/gal at retail (42 gallons per barrel, EIA formula), with a lag. Yardstick: $4/gal has historically been the threshold at which US consumer spending patterns and political pressure on energy policy shift measurably. Crack spreads: the refiner's lens. The 3-2-1 crack spread is the industry standard proxy for refining margins: (2 barrels of gasoline + 1 barrel of distillate) minus (3 barrels of crude), divided by 3 [HARD, EIA crack-spread explainer]. It measures the gross margin a refiner captures by processing crude into products. In supply shocks, crude spikes faster than products — initially compressing refiner margins — before demand-driven product price increases allow cracks to widen back out and then exceed pre-shock levels. Historical precedent: the Gulf War I crack spike (1990–91) and the 2022 Russia invasion both produced elevated crack spreads that persisted for 3–9 months before normalising, reflecting the combination of crude-cost pass-through, inventory-draw tightening in product markets, and refinery-utilisation constraints [HARD/DIR]. Current US refinery utilisation at 95.3% (week ended 5 Jun, EIA WPULEUS3) leaves limited headroom for slate adjustment [HARD T1]. Regional crack differentiation. Gulf Coast and West Coast crack spreads are not identical. Gulf Coast refineries are configured for heavier, sourer crude slates — the dominant Hormuz barrel type; a loss of Gulf crude forces more expensive slate reoptimisation and narrows the grade pool. West Coast refineries use a different crude mix, face distinct pipeline and marine supply logistics, and have less direct substitution access. In Gulf supply shocks, the two regional markets can diverge materially depending on how quickly refiners can source alternative crude grades and whether product pipelines are running at capacity. [DIR] | T1/T2 [HARD/DIR] |
| Metals: Copper | $13,483.75/t monthly (May 2026 FRED PCOPPUSDM) [HARD T1]; ~$6.45/lb live COMEX futures [HARD source_identified T2] World Bank metals index +~20% YTD, May record monthly nominal high [HARD T1, World Bank Pink Sheet] | Copper's industrial-demand sensitivity makes it a useful proxy for global growth expectations. Copper soft relative to oil — which is the current read — means the market is interpreting the oil price as a supply-side tax on growth, not as evidence of demand-led commodity strength. If oil were rising because demand was booming, copper would be rising in sympathy; instead copper is rising on its own structural drivers (grid/EV/copper-intensity) while oil is elevated on a supply disruption. These are separate signals, not a corroborating cycle. The World Bank metals index at +~20% YTD and a May record nominal monthly high provides independent corroboration that metals are in their own cyclical move, not pulled up by the oil story. Copper dual-layer note. FRED PCOPPUSDM at $13,483.75/t is a monthly official series (May 2026); live COMEX copper futures quoted at approximately $6.45/lb are the intraday measure. Converting: $6.45/lb × 2,204.62 lb/metric ton ≈ $14,220/t — the two figures are not contradictory but reflect different points in time (PCOPPUSDM is a May monthly average; COMEX is live). Both layers should be displayed with their provenance. Real-time COMEX has no clean free feed; PCOPPUSDM is the free official anchor. [HARD T1/T2] The metals split within the sector. Not all metals-exposed companies benefit equally from an oil price shock. Copper and aluminium producers whose revenues are in metal prices gain — the commodity price shock lifts their output value. But energy-intensive smelters and processors — where power and fuel costs represent a large fraction of operating costs — face margin compression if energy costs rise faster than the metal price. In a Hormuz oil-shock scenario, the winners are upstream metals producers with low fuel exposure; the losers are smelters running on oil-derived power or heavy fuel oil for heating. [DIR] | T1/T2 [HARD/DIR] |
| Ags: USDA WASDE June 2026 | Corn 281.2 / Wheat 275.4 / Soybeans 124.9 million metric tons global ending stocks [HARD T1, USDA WASDE June 2026] | Agricultural ending stocks are the USDA's headline supply-adequacy measure. At these levels global grain balances are adequate — the oil shock is an ag cost-push overlay (diesel for tractors, fertilizer feedstocks, irrigation energy, transport fuel) not the primary driver of ag prices. An ag analyst watching these balances cares about weather, planted acreage, and demand from China — the oil shock appears as a cost-of-production input, not a demand or supply event. The Hormuz disruption has not materially altered the WASDE balance for any of the three grains. [DIR] The sharper second-order channel is the gas-to-fertilizer chain: natural gas is the primary feedstock for nitrogen fertilizer (ammonia and urea via the Haber-Bosch process), so a Hormuz-driven global LNG/gas squeeze transmits into ag input costs through fertilizer prices — a cost-push that matters more for ags than the direct oil-price move, and that operates on a one-to-two season lag as high input costs compress planted-acreage decisions. | T1 [HARD] |
| LNG (Asia spot) | JKM (Japan Korea Marker) — the Asia spot LNG gauge ○ No free feed [no-free-feed, Platts/Argus licensed] | [DIR] LNG is the under-covered leg of the Hormuz shock. Approximately 20% of global LNG flows transit the strait with zero pipeline bypass — there is no overland alternative for stranded tankers in the Gulf. A Hormuz-driven LNG squeeze is most visible in JKM, the Asia spot price benchmark, not in US Henry Hub; JKM price spikes that do not move Henry Hub confirm the shock is hitting the seaborne-LNG leg, not the US domestic gas market. US Henry Hub is structurally insulated (the US is a net LNG exporter that benefits via export pull) but JKM is the clean read on Gulf-LNG stress for Asian buyers. Because JKM has no free feed, the desk carries it as a named gauge rather than a quoted value. | T2 [no-free-feed] |
The export-pull thesis in plain terms. Henry Hub at $3.10/MMBtu looks calm beside $87/bbl Brent. It is not passive. A Hormuz LNG disruption that knocks out ~20% of global seaborne LNG tightens Asia/Europe gas supply and widens the LNG price premium over US Henry Hub. US LNG export terminals respond by maximising throughput, drawing down domestic supply faster. The result: Henry Hub rises because the world is short LNG — export pull transmits inward, not outward. The $3.10→$3.44 directional watch captures whether that pull is gaining force. [DIR, EIA Hormuz closure outlook]
FRED DHHNGSP · DCOILBRENTEU · DCOILWTICO · GASREGW · PCOPPUSDM · USDA WASDE June 2026 · World Bank Pink Sheet (May 2026) · EIA WPULEUS3 (refinery util) · EIA crack-spread explainer · JKM Asia spot LNG (Platts/Argus, no free feed) · EIA Hormuz closure outlook · Hamilton oil shocks paper (UCSD) T1/T2
In short — the collapse of the Brent prompt spread from +$10.27 peak to +$1.11 tells the roll-yield story: panic has faded but physical tightness remains. Open Deep ↓
Factor analysis in oil markets asks: beyond fundamentals and positioning, what structural forces are working for or against holders of crude exposure? The three that matter right now are roll yield (carry), price momentum, and the convenience yield embedded in backwardation. All three are in tension — a classic late-shock configuration. Before reading the tension, though, the pre-shock positioning context is essential: the magnitude of both the upswing and the current bleed traces directly to where leveraged investors were sitting when the shock arrived. [DIR]
Brent M1–M2 spread (source_identified: Yahoo Finance / TheStreet) · CFTC COT WTI managed money (T1, weekly Fri) · EIA WCESTUS1 · CFTC disaggregated COT petroleum (T1) T1/T3
In short — CFTC COT: 94k long / 63k short managed money (WTI); freight + war-risk ~$8.50–14/bbl combined; Baker Hughes 562 total / 433 oil rigs. Open Deep ↓
Positioning and plumbing are two distinct reads on the same market. Speculative positioning — the CFTC managed-money book — tells you how leveraged investors are leaning; freight and war-risk insurance tell you how the physical supply chain is actually functioning. Both matter, and right now they are telling a coherent story: the book is sizable but not dangerously crowded, while the physical supply chain is congested and carrying a war-risk cost premium it did not before. [DIR]
CFTC Disaggregated COT petroleum (weekly Fri, T1) · Baker Hughes rig count (T1) · EIA WPULEUS3 (T1) · EIA WGTSTUS1 gasoline stocks (T1) · Lloyd's List war-risk + TD3C freight (source_identified, T3) · AIS transponder vessel-tracking data (directional) · UAE timeline directional estimate (DIR) T1/T3
In short — oil→inflation→Fed is the primary transmission chain; Dr Copper soft relative to oil = supply-side tax on growth, not demand-led; EM importer credit spreads widened most (FOMC minutes, March 2026). Open Deep ↓
Commodity markets do not move in isolation. A Hormuz-driven Brent spike is simultaneously an inflation input, a Fed-path variable, a dollar event, an equities-sector rotation, and a credit-spread shock — with the inflation channel the fastest-moving. The four-leg cross-asset chain below maps the mechanism and names the desk responsible for each downstream variable. [DIR; FOMC-minutes language to be verified at build]
These are the ownership lines as of the site-wide reconciliation (CROSS-DESK-RECONCILIATION.md, 2026-06-15). Use them to avoid double-counting and to route readers to the right desk.
Federal Reserve FOMC minutes 18 Mar 2026 [T1; verify exact language at build] · Fed 2023 second-round effects note [T1] · Fed 2017 oil pass-through note [T1] · IMF Working Paper 2022 oil pass-through [T1] · Auburn University 2026 working paper — supply-news shocks and headline CPI [DIR T2] · CROSS-DESK-RECONCILIATION.md 2026-06-15 T1
In short — Hormuz ~20 mb/d (~20% of global petroleum liquids, ~20% of LNG, ~69% to Asia); bypass max ~2.6 mb/d (EIA) or ~4.2 mb/d (IEA) — at most 20–25% of crude flow, zero LNG; historical elasticity: Abqaiq (+14.6% one day, round-trip 2 wks), 1990 Gulf (~doubled), 2022 Russia (+sticky $30–50 premium for months). Open Deep ↓
The Strait of Hormuz is the tightest single chokepoint in global energy — roughly 21 miles wide at its narrowest navigable channel. The strait carries ~20 mb/d of crude and petroleum products [HARD T1, EIA Today in Energy chokepoint note] — approximately one in five barrels that travels by sea, or roughly 20% of global petroleum liquids and 20% of global LNG. The downstream concentration is striking: ~69% of Hormuz oil flows to China, India, Japan, and South Korea [HARD T1, EIA]. There is no substitute route for LNG tankers at any scale.
The bypass ceiling matters enormously because it sets the hard floor on damage. Saudi Arabia's East–West Pipeline and Abu Dhabi's Habshan–Fujairah pipeline together provide at most ~2.6 mb/d of usable capacity (EIA) / ~4.2 mb/d available (IEA) [HARD T1, EIA Hormuz chokepoint note; T2, IEA factsheet] — a garden hose for a fire hydrant: at best 20–25% of normal crude flow, and zero of the LNG. LNG tankers have no overland alternative route; a closure strands them entirely. The EIA's realized figures convert this arithmetic from premise to fact: 7.5 mb/d shut-in March 2026; 9.1 mb/d expected April 2026 [HARD T1, EIA Hormuz closure outlook]. These are the most important numbers on the desk — the measured loss that tells you the scenario is not hypothetical. High confidence
The strait's weight in global oil trade is often quoted as a share of petroleum-liquids consumption (~20%); the seaborne-trade figure is larger: Hormuz carries approximately 25–30% of global seaborne crude trade [HARD T1, EIA / IEA Hormuz factsheet] — a distinction that matters because the disruption falls on the portion of demand served by tankers, not on landlocked or pipeline-supplied consumers. The EIA's own characterisation of the shut-in mechanism is precise: the effective closure operates through two linked channels — tanker avoidance due to threat of attack and cancellation of war-risk insurance [HARD T1, EIA Hormuz closure outlook]. War-risk insurance withdrawal is not a secondary effect; it is a co-primary cause. When underwriters withdraw cover for Gulf transits, vessels cannot legally operate and lenders will not finance the voyage — the strait becomes functionally closed even without a military blockade. This is why the combined transport premium has reached approximately $8.50–14/bbl per Hormuz transit [HARD source-identified T3, Lloyd's List / House of Saud], with individual voyages exceeding $10m for certain flag or cargo profiles. High confidence
The historical-elasticity ledger — duration is everything. [DIR] Market memory of prior Gulf shocks anchors every closure-premium debate. The four canonical episodes span very different magnitudes and durations, and the pattern is consistent: huge outages decay fast if short; sustained multi-mb/d losses double prices; structural reroutings hold a premium for months. The lesson is not the peak price — it is how long the loss persists before prices stop responding. [HARD T1, EIA; T1 CBO/Hamilton; T1 IEA]
Hundreds of tanker attacks elevated war-risk insurance costs across the Gulf, but never functionally closed the strait. Iran responded by cutting its export price to offset insurers' surcharges — a move that effectively transferred the insurance cost from buyers back to the seller. Real oil prices declined through the 1980s despite the attacks. [HARD T3, Strauss Center; Hamilton oil shocks paper — cross-check volume data against EIA at build] Lesson: harassment without a physical closure does not hold a risk premium; the market learned to discount repetitive-threat events.
Drone and missile strikes on Saudi Aramco's Abqaiq and Khurais facilities knocked out approximately 5.7 mb/d — roughly 6% of global supply — in a single day. On 16 September 2019, Brent closed near $68.42/bbl, a jump of roughly +$7/bbl (+14.6%) that was, at the time, the largest single-day Brent percentage move in approximately 29 years. [HARD T1, EIA Abqaiq testimony October 2019; EIA disruption-risk note] Within approximately two weeks, prices had fully round-tripped as Saudi Arabia restored capacity ahead of its own schedule. Lesson: even a genuinely massive physical outage decays fast when restoration is credible and rapid — duration, not magnitude, was the binding variable.
Iraq's invasion of Kuwait removed approximately 4.5–5.0 mb/d from global supply — around 9% of world production exposed. Brent-equivalent prices climbed to approximately $40–41/bbl by October 1990, a roughly 130% rise from pre-war levels. [HARD T1, CBO; Hamilton oil shocks paper] The spike proved shorter than feared because Saudi Arabia mobilised spare capacity to partially offset the lost Iraqi and Kuwaiti barrels; by November 1990, Saudi output had materially increased and the coalition military campaign resolved supply uncertainty by early 1991. Prices reverted toward pre-war levels. Lesson: sustained multi-mb/d loss over months produces a doubling pattern — but the reachable spare capacity ceiling governed the severity; resolution came with credible Saudi offset, not a ceasefire press conference alone.
Russia's invasion of Ukraine removed Russian crude and products from accessible Western markets — not a physical strait closure but a structural rerouting of comparable magnitude. Brent peaked at $139/bbl on 7 March 2022 — the highest level since 2008. [HARD T1, IEA April 2022 OMR; EIA 2023 Brent outlook] The IEA's April 2022 Oil Market Report warned that Russian supply shut-ins could approach ~3 mb/d from May 2022 as sanctions and buyer refusals compounded the military crisis. The $30–50 war premium remained sticky for months as rerouting infrastructure and price-cap mechanisms took time to absorb the displaced barrels. Lesson: structural multi-mb/d rerouting — sustained and without a rapid resolution — holds a premium for months, not weeks; the market only gave back the premium as alternative routes proved their throughput.
Each prior episode involved one dominant adverse factor; the 2026 Hormuz disruption combines four simultaneously — which is why the $120–150+ left tail is structurally more credible now than the same price level would have been in 2019 or 1990.
The compound effect — larger net loss at risk, smaller proportional bypass, an LNG co-shock with no alternative route, and stranded spare capacity — is why the $120–150+ band is not simply a more extreme version of the 1990 scenario. It is a structurally different configuration of constraints. The probability of reaching it remains bounded (~10% in the base scenario matrix), but the conditional price level if those constraints bind is more severe than the historical analogues alone would suggest. [DIR]
Escalation and de-escalation markers — what to watch and what it means. [DIR] The war premium decays on credible diplomatic progress and rebuilds on physical evidence of renewed pressure. The decoder below separates the market's two signal tracks: the speculative overlay (which moves on headlines) and the physical plumbing (which moves on barrels). Re-read both weekly. Medium confidence — event-driven
The six-scenario matrix. [DIR/PROJECTION] These are conditional paths, not forecasts. Probabilities come from a multi-model blended framework: an explicit base weighting (30/40/15/10/5 across five scenarios) extended over an expanded six-scenario taxonomy, yielding the 25/40/15/10/5/5 distribution below. The internal spread — one model line carries de-escalation at 30% against the blended 25% — is shown as real, not averaged into a false consensus. OVX at 56 (not 80+) is the market's current check on the aggressive-camp price targets. [HARD T1 FRED OVXCLS for the OVX check; DIR for all probability assignments and Brent paths]
| Scenario | Blended prob. | Brent path | What breaks / what holds | Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A — Base: partial Hormuz disruption persists | ~40% | $85–110; current ~$87 trading near the floor of this band as premium bleeds | Physical tightness (7.5–9.1 mb/d shut-ins) holds the floor; ceasefire diplomacy caps the ceiling; Brent oscillates in the band until a catalyst breaks it. OVX 50–65. EIA STEO $78.84/bbl 2026 average is the soft ceiling under normalization. [HARD T1 EIA STEO] | T1/T3 [DIR] base weight |
| B — De-escalation to pre-war $70s | ~25% Note: one model line assigns 30% here; the blended matrix uses 25%. The spread is shown, not averaged. | $64–78; EIA STEO de-escalation path: $78.84 (2026 avg) → $64.47 (2027) [HARD T1 EIA STEO] | Ceasefire holds, US–Iran talks produce a framework, EIA shut-ins fall below 3–4 mb/d, Saudi/UAE bypass proves sufficient. OVX falls below 40. The war premium unwinds systematically over weeks; prompt spread returns toward +$0.24 pre-war baseline. | T1 [DIR/PROJECTION] EIA STEO path is [HARD]; probability is [DIR] |
| C — Escalation: premium re-rich, partial closure deepens | ~15% | $95–115; toward $100+ on sustained escalation | New military incident, insurance withdrawal, or Iranian interdiction pushes shut-ins above 10 mb/d. OVX climbs back above 65–70. VLCC freight surges above $14/bbl. Speculative positioning turns aggressive net-long. The $95–115 range is the desk's derived partial-deepening band; market approaches JPM's $120+ only if closure deepens to Scenario D. | T3 [DIR] escalation path; sell-side scenario intelligence |
| D — Sustained full closure | ~10% | $120–150+; Goldman +$15/bbl full closure, easing to +$12 with ~4 mb/d bypass and +$10 with bypass plus a 2 mb/d SPR draw [DIR T3]; JPM $120–130 persistent blockade; RBC above 2022 highs ($139) toward 2008 peak (~$147) [DIR T3] | Full Hormuz closure sustained beyond 4–6 weeks. Bypass and SPR prove insufficient at scale. Demand destruction becomes the balancing mechanism (RBC/JPM non-linear model). The camps diverge: Goldman conservative (bypass functions, +$15/bbl) vs JPM/RBC aggressive ($120–150+, markets overshoot). The OVX check: a genuine path to this scenario would push OVX above 80–90 — the 56 print today [HARD T1 FRED OVXCLS] signals the market assigns this a tail weight, not a central-case weight. Stranded OPEC+ spare capacity (1.5–2.5 mb/d deployable per skeptics [DIR T3]) means the left tail is fatter than headline figures imply. | T3 [DIR] left-tail scenario; Goldman figure is a bank scenario, not primary research |
| E — Spare-capacity surprise (OPEC+ deploys) | ~5% | $70–85; softer-than-base outcome | OPEC+ non-Gulf producers (Libya, Nigeria, Venezuela, Iraq overland) deploy more quickly than expected; Saudi East–West pipeline throughput exceeds 2.6 mb/d EIA estimate. Physical supply surprise caps the war premium from above. An analytically symmetric scenario the expanded taxonomy adds; the base five-scenario weighting did not include it. The OVX response would be a compression toward 40 well ahead of a formal ceasefire. | T3 [DIR] upside surprise to supply; unique to expanded taxonomy |
| F — Extreme overshoot / 2008-style demand-led spike | ~5% | Above $147 (2008 nominal peak); demand-led + supply shock compound | Scenario D (full closure) coincides with a demand surge (China reopening, EM demand acceleration) that compounds the supply shock. RBC's 2008-analog path becomes mechanically live. This is the compound tail: supply and demand both moving adversely simultaneously. Extremely unlikely as a base case — the current demand backdrop (copper soft relative to oil, growth reads cautious) does not support the demand-leg trigger. Included for analytical symmetry, not as an active trading scenario. [DIR] | T3 [DIR/PROJECTION] extreme compound tail; display for analytical symmetry |
An explicit base weighting assigns 30/40/15/10/5 across five scenarios; the blended framework extends those into an expanded six-scenario taxonomy, yielding 25/40/15/10/5/5. The key spread: one line carries de-escalation at 30% against the blended 25% — a real analytical difference, weighting the ceasefire-consolidation path more heavily versus a haircut for the instability of any Gulf ceasefire. Neither is definitively right; they are different probability assignments to the same future. Readers who find de-escalation more credible should shade toward 30%; those who weight the disruption tail more heavily, toward 20% or below. OVX at 56.30 [HARD T1 FRED OVXCLS] is the market's current revealed probability — consistent with the 40% base / 25% de-escalation split, and inconsistent with any world where Scenario D carries a weight above ~25%.
EIA Today in Energy chokepoint note · EIA Hormuz closure outlook · IEA OMR · EIA STEO T1
We separate two questions: is the number reliable? (data confidence) and is the interpretation well-supported by evidence? (interpretation confidence). We follow the desk's two-data-layer rule: FRED/EIA official-lag feeds are labelled separately from live-vendor futures quotes. A figure can be rock-solid while its explanation is a judgement call.
The Energy & Commodities desk draws from a named source stack. Every tile on the page traces back to one of the authorities below. Where no free official series exists, the tile is shown as a source-identified proxy or left blank — never invented. The source-tier ladder governs how much weight to give each number in analysis.
| Source | Series / publication | Cadence | Tier | Used for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EIA (US Energy Information Administration) | Weekly Petroleum Status Report (WCESTUS1 crude stocks, WCRFPUS2 production, WPULEUS3 refinery util, WGTSTUS1 gasoline stocks); STEO (Short-Term Energy Outlook); Hormuz closure outlook; Today in Energy chokepoint note | Weekly (Wed 10:30 ET); Monthly; Event | T1 | Physical US balance sheet; OPEC+ spare capacity model; Hormuz volume reference; EIA realized shut-in volumes (7.5 mb/d March, 9.1 mb/d expected April); STEO Brent path ($78.84 2026 avg, $64.47 2027 avg) |
| IEA (International Energy Agency) | Oil Market Report (OMR) | Monthly | T2 | Gross OPEC+ spare capacity (~4.05 mb/d headline); alternative bypass-capacity figure (~4.2 mb/d available) |
| FRED (Federal Reserve Economic Data) | DCOILBRENTEU (Brent spot) · DCOILWTICO (WTI spot) · OVXCLS (oil volatility) · DHHNGSP (Henry Hub gas) · GASREGW (US gasoline retail) · PCOPPUSDM (copper monthly) | Daily / Weekly / Monthly | T1 | All primary price tiles; free, official-lag, EIA- and CBOE-sourced; the canonical non-live feed layer |
| CFTC (Commodity Futures Trading Commission) | Disaggregated COT petroleum report — ICE WTI managed money | Weekly (Fri, Tue positions) | T1 | Speculative-positioning read: 94,081 long / 63,134 short / 179,547 spreading; OI 818,492 (9 Jun 2026) |
| USDA (US Department of Agriculture) | WASDE (World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates) — June 2026 | Monthly | T1 | Ag ending-stocks balance sheet: corn 281.2 / wheat 275.4 / soybeans 124.9 million metric tons global |
| Baker Hughes | North America Rig Count | Weekly (Fri noon CT) | T1 | Shale-response lagging gauge: 562 total / 433 oil / 121 gas / 8 misc (12 Jun 2026) |
| World Bank | Pink Sheet (commodity price data) — metals index | Monthly | T1 | Independent metals corroboration: metals index +~20% YTD, May 2026 record monthly nominal high |
| Federal Reserve | FOMC minutes — 18 March 2026 | Per-meeting (8× per year) | T1 | Cross-asset scenario evidence (§8): crude +~50% scenario, 2y yields up, USD up moderately, EM importer spreads widened most. [verify exact language at build — federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/fomcminutes20260318.htm] |
| Lloyd's List / CNBC (source_identified) | VLCC freight rate + war-risk insurance premium estimates | Daily / news — no free official API | T3 | Physical-plumbing tell: ~$8.50–14/bbl combined transport premium; >$10m/voyage for US/UK/Israeli-nexus tonnage. Staleness caveat required. |
This desk enforces a strict separation between two data layers that answer different questions. Mixing them without labels misleads readers about the freshness and provenance of any given number.
VegaReady is catalyst-neutral market intelligence, not investment advice. Data is free, public and attributed. Where only a licensed feed exists (real-time futures curve, JKM, live crack spreads, VLCC AIS loadings), we show an honest source-identified anchor or leave the tile blank rather than fabricate a value. Two-data-layer discipline: FRED/EIA official-lag values and live-vendor futures quotes answer different questions and are never mixed without clear labels.
Who a realized Hormuz disruption and decaying war premium help — and who they squeeze.
This is the Energy & Commodities desk. It follows oil, gas, and the commodities that move with them — and right now a real, physical disruption in the Persian Gulf is the story. Section frame in place — plain-English content building (R-11).
Oil has two prices right now, and the gap between them tells the story.
Section frame in place — content building (R-11). The dual-layer Brent display (FRED official lag $97.46 vs live futures ~$87), the plain-English war-premium explanation, and the "one barrel, three prices" concept land in the Layman Deep build.
One narrow strait carries a fifth of the world's oil.
Section frame in place — content building (R-11). Plain-English Hormuz explainer (20 mb/d, 20% global petroleum, 69% to Asia), bypass "garden hose" analogy (~2.6 mb/d usable vs ~20 mb/d normal flow), and LNG-has-no-bypass note land in the Layman Deep build.
How much of the price is fear, and how much is real scarcity?
Section frame in place — content building (R-11). Plain-English premium decomposition, the OVX "fear gauge" for oil, and the two-track (speculative / physical) framework land in the Layman Deep build.
Are there enough barrels, and who can fill the gap?
Section frame in place — content building (R-11). Plain-English OPEC+ spare capacity explainer (three numbers: EIA 3.16 / IEA ~4 / skeptics 1.5–2.5 mb/d deployable, "stranded spare" concept), US shale response (Baker Hughes rig count), and inventory buffer land in the Layman Deep build.
An oil shock doesn't hit everyone the same way.
Section frame in place — content building (R-11). Plain-English winners/losers split (oil sellers vs oil importers), the two-country worked example (Saudi vs India), and the energy-sector equity note land in the Layman Deep build.
How a war in the Gulf reaches your fuel tank, step by step.
Section frame in place — content building (R-11). The Hormuz → crude price → refinery → gasoline retail chain, the 1–2 week lag to the pump, the oil→CPI pass-through in plain words ($10/bbl ≈ 2.4¢/gal ≈ +0.4pp headline), and the Fed connection land in the Layman Deep build.
Oil moves more than just your heating bill.
Section frame in place — content building (R-11). Plain-English cross-asset linkages (oil → dollar inverse, Dr Copper as growth signal, EM importer credit spreads), Henry Hub gas insulation, and the ag cost-push overlay land in the Layman Deep build.
What could happen next, and what it would mean for prices.
Section frame in place — content building (R-11). Plain-English six-scenario matrix with blended probabilities (base case 40% partial disruption persists; de-escalation 25%; full closure 10%; others), the "duration is everything" lesson, and the historical analogues land in the Layman Deep build.
The early signals that would change the story.
Section frame in place — content building (R-11). Plain-English watchlist (OVX above/below 50/40, EIA weekly shut-in volumes, Brent prompt spread, Baker Hughes rig count, ceasefire/escalation triggers) lands in the Layman Deep build.
One email at the open — what moved across every market, what is mispriced, and what the desk is watching next.
Six paragraphs, one chart, no noise — by 06:40 GST.
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