Why the Strait of Hormuz matters
The Strait of Hormuz is one of the most strategically important maritime energy routes in the world. Connecting the Persian Gulf to the Arabian Sea, it serves as the primary export corridor for major oil producers including Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, the UAE, and Qatar.
Despite being only about 21 miles wide at its narrowest point, with navigable shipping lanes roughly two miles wide in each direction, the strait carries approximately 20 million barrels per day of crude oil and petroleum products — about 20% of global petroleum consumption. It also handles over 20% of global LNG trade, primarily exports from Qatar to markets in Asia and Europe.
Alternative export routes are limited. There is no pipeline workaround at scale, no quick alternate sea lane that bypasses regional tensions. That structural reality — massive flows through a single narrow corridor — is why geopolitical events in the region can move global energy benchmarks within hours.
How markets respond: risk premium vs supply shock
Energy markets respond to geopolitical events in two distinct stages, and understanding the difference matters for buyers planning around the volatility.
Stage 1: The risk premium
Traders incorporate the possibility of supply disruptions into prices, even if physical flows remain unchanged. Prices typically rise moderately as markets price in uncertainty — and analysts note that partial disruptions like shipping delays, higher insurance costs, or temporary route avoidance can add several dollars per barrel to crude prices just on premium expansion.
Stage 2: The supply shock
If disruptions become prolonged or widespread, markets transition from pricing risk to pricing actual shortages. Historically this distinction has been critical:
| Disruption duration | Market response |
|---|---|
| Short (days) | Modest price spikes; elevated volatility; risk premium expansion |
| Medium (weeks) | Tightening physical supply; sustained price increases; supply chains adjust |
| Long (months) | Structural shifts in global energy trade; possible permanent route changes |
As of early Q2 2026, markets appear to be pricing risk rather than confirmed supply shocks — but that balance can shift quickly. During recent escalations, oil prices surged toward $120 per barrel at peak, before retreating as expectations shifted.
The LNG dimension is sometimes overlooked
Oil dominates headlines during Middle East crises, but natural gas markets are equally exposed. Qatar, one of the world's largest LNG exporters, ships most of its cargo through the Strait of Hormuz.
During the first half of 2025, an average of 11.4 billion cubic feet of LNG per day moved through the Strait of Hormuz — over 20% of global LNG trade. China was the largest destination, with nearly one-third of its LNG imports passing through Hormuz. Disruptions to that flow tighten global gas supply and increase competition for available cargoes, particularly in Asia and Europe.
For U.S. buyers, the second-order effect matters: higher international LNG demand pulls U.S. LNG exports higher, tightening domestic gas supply and lifting Henry Hub prices. Global gas disruptions ripple through the U.S. market even when no physical disruption occurs domestically.
The U.S. position: less dependent, still connected
The U.S. is far less dependent on Middle Eastern oil than it was two decades ago. Domestic production has surged since the shale boom; the country has become a major exporter of both crude oil and LNG.
But oil is a globally traded commodity. Disruptions anywhere in the world influence prices everywhere. If geopolitical tensions reduce global supply, benchmarks like Brent and WTI rise — even if U.S. production stays stable. The price your facility pays for natural gas, electricity (much of which is gas-fired), and refined products is connected to global benchmarks whether the gas itself ever leaves North America.
~20%
share of global petroleum that flows through the Strait of Hormuz — plus over 20% of global LNG trade — through a corridor 21 miles wide at its narrowest point
A new era of persistent volatility
The events unfolding in the Middle East highlight a broader trend. Over the past several years, markets have experienced a growing number of disruptions once considered rare:
- Major geopolitical conflicts
- Pandemic-driven supply and demand shocks
- Extreme weather affecting infrastructure
- Energy infrastructure attacks (pipelines, refineries, terminals)
- Global supply chain disruptions
Events once described as "once-in-a-generation" are happening more frequently. This shift has changed how organizations need to think about energy risk. Instead of operating in a market defined by stability and occasional volatility, businesses are increasingly navigating persistent uncertainty.
What buyers should watch in Q2 2026
For companies that rely heavily on energy — manufacturers, commercial real estate operators, logistics firms, data centers — several indicators are worth tracking:
- Maritime traffic through Hormuz. Shipping company decisions to avoid the region are an early leading indicator of risk-premium expansion. Insurance costs follow.
- OPEC+ production decisions. Whether the cartel offsets disruptions affects how short-term events become sustained pricing.
- Forward curve behavior. Energy forward curves moving up in lockstep across multiple delivery months signal the market repricing structural risk, not just near-term events.
- U.S. LNG export utilization. A pull on U.S. exports to fill global gaps tightens Henry Hub.
- Refined product spreads. Gasoil and jet fuel pricing in Asia often moves first when supply chains adjust.
How to build resilience
It's impossible to predict every geopolitical event. Organizations can prepare for the volatility that follows. Disciplined buyers focus on:
- Structured procurement strategies — layered hedging, defined trigger prices, scheduled execution rather than reactive timing decisions
- Hedging programs sized to risk tolerance — typically 50–70% of load hedged across layered tranches
- Scenario planning for sustained disruptions — not "what's likely" but "what would break the budget if it happened"
- Diversification of energy sourcing — multi-supplier procurement, multi-product strategies, geographic diversification where feasible
- Active monitoring — forward curves, geopolitical signals, freight rates, and insurance markets that lead price moves
The goal isn't to predict the next event. It's to build enough resilience into energy strategies that organizations can navigate uncertainty without major operational disruptions.
Bottom Line
Middle East geopolitics has shaped global energy markets for decades, but the speed and reach of modern energy trade mean regional tensions now influence prices within hours. The buyers who plan for persistent volatility — layered hedging, scenario reserves, diversified sourcing — absorb these events. The ones still planning around stability explain the variance after. Risk premium, not supply shock, is doing most of the work in Q2 2026. That premium can expand quickly if events shift.