Oil prices are climbing as the ongoing US-Israeli war with Iran continues to disrupt supply flows through one of the world's most critical chokepoints. According to Reuters, oil prices have risen as the conflict persists, creating immediate supply concerns that are reshaping how traders view the market's near-term trajectory.
The disruption is significant enough that it's already changing the traditional relationship between major crude benchmarks. According to OilPrice.com, WTI crude—which normally trades at a discount to Brent—has moved higher than the North Sea-focused benchmark this week. Traders explained this unusual shift with fears of tight supply in the immediate term, though some expect relief later this year. However, OilPrice.com noted that some observers doubt this relief would arrive soon enough to prevent demand destruction, a scenario few in the industry like to discuss.
The real-world impact is already visible. Indonesia has started rationing fuel, according to OilPrice.com, capping daily fuel purchases to 50 liters per car for private consumers. This represents the kind of demand control measure that governments are increasingly turning to as global fuel shortages intensify.
Iraq Moves Oil Through Hormuz Under New Exemption
Despite the geopolitical tensions, Iraq is beginning to move crude through the Strait of Hormuz under what appears to be a new exemption arrangement. According to Reuters, a Petronas-chartered tanker loaded with Iraqi crude has passed through Hormuz, signaling that at least some oil shipments are able to navigate the contested waterway.
Iraq has taken an active role in managing these flows. Reuters reported that Iraq is urging customers to send oil loading plans following the Hormuz exemption, as documented in internal communications. This suggests Baghdad is working to coordinate shipments and ensure its crude reaches international markets despite the broader conflict.
The movement of Iraqi oil carries symbolic weight beyond the immediate commercial transaction. According to Bloomberg's reporting referenced in the premium headlines, Iraq has told buyers to collect crude as its oil can cross Hormuz, indicating some level of coordination or understanding about which shipments can safely transit the strait.
Brent Crude Tests Resistance Levels
On the technical side, Brent crude is approaching key resistance levels. According to TradingView, Brent oil may retest resistance at $111.32, suggesting traders are watching for signs of whether prices can sustain current elevated levels or face pullback pressure.
The price action reflects the delicate balance between supply disruption fears and expectations for eventual relief. OilPrice.com noted that traders see tight supply in the immediate term but anticipate some relief later in the year—a view that's keeping prices elevated but not necessarily pushing them to extreme levels.
Broader Energy Security Concerns
The supply disruptions extend beyond crude oil. Reuters reported that explosives were found near a pipeline that carries Russian gas to Hungary, highlighting how geopolitical tensions are creating vulnerabilities across multiple energy infrastructure points. This discovery underscores that the energy market disruptions stemming from the Iran conflict are part of a broader pattern of supply chain stress.
The cumulative effect is pushing energy costs higher across the board. According to MarketWatch, Delta Air Lines is kicking off first-quarter earnings season with particular focus on how surging oil and fuel prices from the Iran war are affecting US customers and companies. The airline industry, highly sensitive to fuel costs, is already grappling with the financial implications of sustained elevated prices.
For now, the market remains focused on how much Iraqi crude can flow through Hormuz and whether other producers can compensate for any broader supply losses. The fact that at least some shipments are moving suggests the disruption, while serious, may not be complete. But as OilPrice.com noted, traders are increasingly concerned about whether the expected relief will arrive in time to prevent demand destruction—a scenario that would represent a significant shift in how energy markets function.
Reporting based on coverage from Reuters, OilPrice.com, TradingView, MarketWatch, and Bloomberg.
