TradingKey - Since April, as tensions in the Middle East have continued to escalate, the oil market has undergone a profound transformation: WTI crude has been revalued, not only matching the performance of the global benchmark Brent crude but even surpassing it on multiple trading days. On April 2, the price of front-month WTI crude contracts exceeded Brent for the first time in nearly four years.
Since the surge in U.S. shale production in 2011, WTI crude produced in the U.S. has traded at a discount to Brent crude from the North Sea for the vast majority of the period. However, a price inversion has now occurred.
Analysts believe this indicates a shift in traditional oil pricing logic, with the market currently favoring the high output, stable supply, and relative insulation from conflict associated with U.S. oil, signaling a restructuring of the global energy supply chain.
Historically, Brent crude has typically commanded a premium over WTI crude because it can be shipped globally upon loading, offering high logistical flexibility and representing global seaborne trade flows. Approximately two-thirds of physical crude oil trade worldwide is priced relative to Brent.
However, the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has wiped out Brent's premium. Felipe Germini, founder of Germini Energy, stated that when a chokepoint handling about 20% of global seaborne crude is physically blocked, the definition of crude availability changes overnight. He noted that Brent-linked oil from the Persian Gulf, Oman, and the UAE now carries a risk discount as tanker insurance premiums soar and some shipments have completely stalled.
In contrast, WTI crude's inland transportation advantage has become a core competency because it is produced in the U.S. heartland. Germini believes the market is now paying a premium for oil that is "attainable." On April 2, WTI front-month prices exceeded Brent for the first time in nearly four years; analysts indicated that this reflects a backwardation structure where immediate delivery is significantly more expensive than future delivery.
John Paisie, president of Stratas Advisors, noted that the premium momentum for WTI should have dissipated as Middle East tensions eased, but the situation has become increasingly complex following the U.S. announcement of a naval blockade on Iranian ports. On Monday, spurred by the breakdown of negotiations and news of the blockade, both WTI and Brent prices climbed again, with the price convergence between the two being a phenomenon rarely seen in the past decade. As of press time (11:23 GMT+8), WTI crude was trading at $97.54, while Brent crude was at $98.57.
Although U.S. crude exports have reached record highs, analysts warn that they cannot fully fill the massive gap left by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. In the physical spot market, prices for some Brent crude have already surpassed $140 per barrel, signaling an extremely severe supply shortage.
Paisie predicts that spot Brent prices could reach the $160-$190 range in the coming weeks. If prices remain at these elevated levels for a prolonged period, it could even trigger a global recession, which might be the only path to eventually forcing both the U.S. and Iran back to the negotiating table.