The Iran crisis has fundamentally altered the 2026 oil price outlook. Pre-crisis forecasts centered around $70-$80 per barrel are now obsolete. Multiple investment banks have issued emergency revised forecasts: Goldman Sachs projects $130 in a sustained disruption scenario, JPMorgan sees $100-$150 depending on Hormuz status, and Morgan Stanley forecasts $95-$115 as its base case.
Three scenarios are being modeled: In the best case, a quick ceasefire restores Hormuz transit within 1-2 weeks, limiting the spike to $85-$95 before gradual normalization. In the base case, extended conflict but no full Hormuz blockade keeps prices at $100-$120 for several months. In the worst case, Iran mines the strait, prices hit $150+ and trigger a global recession.
Key variables include OPEC spare capacity utilization, US Strategic Petroleum Reserve releases, Iranian mining of Hormuz, and the duration of military operations. Long-term contracts and futures are pricing in elevated risk premiums through mid-2026 at minimum.
Major oil companies suspend tanker movements through the Strait of Hormuz following the outbreak of military conflict. Brent crude closed at $74 Friday but analysts project Monday opening between $85-$110.
Commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz has effectively halted as major tanker companies announce force majeure. The waterway handles roughly 20% of global oil supply.
S&P 500 futures trading indicates a potential 3-5% drop at Monday's open. Defense stocks surging in after-hours trading while airline and travel stocks plummet on Gulf airspace closures.
Gold prices spiked to an all-time high of $2,800 per ounce in after-hours trading as investors scrambled for safe-haven assets. The US dollar strengthened while emerging market currencies plunged.
OPEC announced an emergency ministerial meeting for Sunday as the Iran crisis threatens to remove up to 4 million barrels per day from global oil supply. Saudi Arabia pledged to stabilize markets.
Cryptocurrency markets surged as investors sought alternatives to traditional markets. Bitcoin crossed $95,000 for the first time while gold-backed tokens saw record trading volumes.
European natural gas futures jumped 18% as traders priced in potential disruptions to Qatar's LNG exports through the Strait of Hormuz. Qatar supplies roughly 25% of Europe's LNG imports.
The Dubai Financial Market announced it will not open for Sunday trading. Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange issued a similar suspension. Combined market capitalization at risk exceeds $800 billion.
Iran's Navy commander warned that the IRIN is prepared to deploy naval mines across the Strait of Hormuz if strikes continue. The 21-mile-wide chokepoint handles 20% of global crude oil transit.
War-risk insurance premiums for tankers and cargo ships transiting the Persian Gulf skyrocketed by 500%. Major insurers at Lloyd's of London placed the entire region in their high-risk exclusion zone.
Asian stock markets opened in freefall as the Iran crisis triggered widespread panic selling. Japan's Nikkei fell 4.2% at open while Hong Kong's Hang Seng tumbled 5.1%.
The world's largest oil tanker operators including Frontline, Euronav, and VLCC declared force majeure on all shipments transiting the Strait of Hormuz. Dozens of fully loaded tankers anchored outside the strait.
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