US / Israel–Iran War Β· Crude Market Update
Last Updated: 16 Apr 2026

Crude Oil Market Update
  • Tehran has proposed allowing ships to sail freely through the Omani side of the Strait of Hormuz without risk of attack, as long as a deal is reached to prevent renewed conflict.
  • Optimism grew that the war in the Middle East may be near an end, with key Pakistani mediator in Tehran and the administration of President Trump talking up hopes for a deal that would open the crucial Strait of Hormuz.
  • On 14th Apr'26, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said that world oil supply will shrink this year due to the war in the Middle East, reversing earlier forecasts for growth.
  • Oil prices have surged to near record highs, prompting governments to introduce fuel-saving measures. The agency predicts a 1.5 MBpd supply drop, contrasting with previous predictions of supply growth, and a 0.08 MBpd drop in demand growth this year, from a 0.64 MBpd rise in Mar'26.
  • The International Energy Agency said the conflict has led to the largest oil supply disruption in history, with 10.1 million barrels per day lost in Mar'26.
  • China's Mar'26 crude oil imports fell 2.8% from a year earlier due to a high base, while the Iran war curbed refinery runs with Middle East supply disruptions expected to weigh on Apr'26 imports. Imports in Mar'26 were 11.77 MBpd, the General Administration of Customs said.
  • Chinese refineries' capacity utilization rate was 68.79% in Mar'26, down 0.9% YoY, and down 4.47% from Feb'26.
SPR / IEA

IEA member nations have agreed to a coordinated release of 400 mln bbl β€” the largest emergency SPR release since the IEA was founded after the 1973 Oil Crisis. The US, under the Trump administration, is contributing 172 mln bbl structured as loans to companies with repayment including a premium.

Deliveries are expected to begin reaching the market by the end of next week and will continue over approximately 120 days. The first batch of 86 mln bbl has already been opened for bidding. Japan will released 80 mln bbl beginning 16th Mar'26.

Event
Year
Release
Scale vs. 2026
First Gulf War
1991
75 mln bbl
Hurricanes Katrina & Rita
2005
60 mln bbl
Libya Civil War
2011
60 mln bbl
Russia–Ukraine War
2022
180 mln bbl
US/Israel–Iran War β˜…
2026
400 mln bbl
IEA Total Release 400 mln Barrels Β· agreed
US Contribution 172 mln Barrels Β· loan structure
First Tranche 86 mln Barrels Β· open for bids

IEA Region-wise Release Breakdown

IEA Region
Govt. Stocks (mln bbl)
Obligated Industry Stocks (mln bbl)
Other (mln bbl)
Total Release (mln bbl)
Crude Oil
Oil Products
Americas
172.2
β€”
23.6
195.8
100%
β€”
Asia Oceania
66.8
41.8
β€”
108.6
60%
40%
Europe
32.7
74.8
β€”
107.5
32%
68%
Total IEA
271.7
116.6
23.6
411.9
72%
28%
Source: IEA Β· All figures in million barrels Β· As of 15 March 2026

Key Supply Infrastructure

GCC Bypass Pipelines Running Near Capacity β€” But Shah Gas Field Ablaze and Fujairah Zone Struck

  • Saudi Arabia's East-West pipeline is pumping oil at its full capacity of 7 MBpd, bypassing the Strait of Hormuz. Crude oil exports from Yanbu port have reached 5 MBpd, and the country is also exporting 0.70 to 0.90 MBpd of oil products.
  • Of approximately 15 MBpd of crude transiting the Strait of Hormuz in OND'25, combined SPR releases and bypass pipeline capacity can offset roughly two-thirds β€” or slightly more β€” for the next 20 to 30 days, providing the Trump administration a window to assess strategic direction.
  • New strikes directly threaten this buffer β€” Iranian drones struck the UAE's Shah gas field (currently ablaze) and the Fujairah Oil Industry Zone on Mar 17. A tanker was also hit near the Strait of Hormuz. Saudi Arabia intercepted over a dozen drones; Kuwait and Bahrain sustained additional attacks. These represent the first direct strikes on GCC energy export infrastructure since the conflict began.
Supply Analysis

Country
Pre-war (Feb'26) Production
17th Mar'26 Estimated Offline Capacity
17th Mar'26 Production
23rd Mar'26 Estimated Offline Capacity
23rd Mar'26 Production
31st Mar'26 Estimated Offline Capacity
Apr'26 Scenario, if War continues
Saudi Arabia
10.1
2.0
8.1
2.3
7.8
2.5
2.7
Iraq
4.2
3.3
0.9
3.6
0.6
3.9
3.9
Kuwait
2.6
1.3
1.3
2.0
0.6
2.6
2.6
UAE
3.4
1.6
1.8
1.6
1.8
2.0
2.0
Iran
3.2
0.0
3.2
0.0
3.2
0.5
0.6
Total
23.5
8.2
15.3
9.5
14.0
11.5
11.8
Reduction in Supply
β€”
8.2
β€”
9.5
β€”
11.5
11.8
SPR Release
β€”
0.7
β€”
1.0
β€”
1.0
2.4
Iran's Floating Storage (FS) Release
β€”
--
β€”
0.7
β€”
0.7
0.8
Russia's FS Release
β€”
2.0
β€”
2.0
β€”
2.0
2.0
Other Nations Higher Production amid higher prices
β€”
0.3
β€”
0.3
β€”
0.3
0.4
Incremental Supply
β€”
3.0
β€”
4.0
β€”
4.0
5.6
Net Supply Reduction
β€”
5.2
β€”
5.5
β€”
7.5
6.2

Supply & Demand Analysis

War Scenarios Point to Global Supply Deficit of 1.35–1.90 MBpd in 2026 and AMJ Quarter Most Severe with a deficit of 3.00 - 4.50 MBpd.

Pre-war, global supply and demand were near-balanced with a modest surplus of +0.55 MBpd projected for 2026. Both conflict scenarios introduce significant supply deficits driven by Strait of Hormuz disruptions and impacts on Iraq and Kuwait crude production.


Pre-War Scenario β€” Global S&D Balance (MBpd)
Period
Global Supply
Global Demand
S&D Balance
2025e
103.57
102.94
+0.63
2026p
104.29
103.74
+0.55
JFM '26p
103.80
103.50
+0.30
AMJ '26p
104.40
103.75
+0.65
JAS '26p
104.35
103.80
+0.55
OND '26p
104.60
103.90
+0.70


Scenario 1 β€” Preferred (Severe Hormuz Disruption)
Period
Supply
Demand
Balance
2025e
103.57
102.94
+0.63
2026p
100.23
102.13
βˆ’1.90
JFM '26p
101.80
102.80
βˆ’1.00
AMJ '26p
97.10
101.60
βˆ’4.50
JAS '26p
100.00
102.00
βˆ’2.00
OND '26p
102.00
102.10
βˆ’0.10
Scenario 2 β€” Alternate (Partial Hormuz Disruption)
Period
Supply
Demand
Balance
2025e
103.57
102.94
+0.63
2026p
101.10
102.45
βˆ’1.35
JFM '26p
102.10
103.00
βˆ’0.90
AMJ '26p
99.10
102.10
βˆ’3.00
JAS '26p
100.80
102.30
βˆ’1.50
OND '26p
102.40
102.40
0.00

  • Scenario 1 (Preferred): Exchange of attacks between US/Israel and Iran continuing, leading to severe/significant/complete disruptions of crude oil and its products trade through the Strait of Hormuz, severely impacting Iraq's and Kuwait's crude oil production over the next 3 to 6 months. Full-year 2026 deficit: βˆ’1.90 MBpd. AMJ quarter most acute at βˆ’4.50 MBpd.
  • Scenario 2 (Alternate): Partial disruptions of crude oil trade through the Strait of Hormuz, with Iran not targeting ships and oil tankers moving toward China, India, and select Asian nations outside the Western alliance. Full-year 2026 deficit: βˆ’1.35 MBpd. Balance returns to flat by OND '26.
Economic Updates
  • On the US front, US retail sales recorded a solid rebound in Feb'26, rising 0.6% MoM and 3.7% on YoY, marking the strongest gain in seven months, supported by a recovery in motor vehicle purchases and seasonal factors. Core retail sales also came in firm at 0.5% MoM, indicating underlying consumption strength, with higher tax refunds playing a key role in sustaining household spending during the period.
  • The US manufacturing activity continued to expand, with ISM PMI rising to 52.7 in March, its highest level since Aug'22. That said, the improvement was partly driven by slower supplier deliveries, reflecting supply chain disruptions rather than demand strength, particularly amid shipping constraints and trade frictions. This has also led to a sharp rise in input cost pressures, with the prices paid index jumping significantly, signaling building inflation at the producer level.
Price Outlook

Brent Crude 1M Futures are expected to trade in a range of 90 USD/bbl to 110 USD/bbl over the coming 1 to 2 weeks. The coordinated SPR release and GCC bypass capacity provide a meaningful supply cushion that limits sustained upside beyond these levels.

Brent Crude 1M Futures β€” Projected 1–2 Week Trading Range
$90 floor $98 base $110 ceiling
$90–$98 Β· Normal Range
$98–$110 Β· Elevated war premium

LPG Market Update

8th Indian-flagged LPG vessel has transited the Strait of Hormuz and reached India

Commercial LPG Price Hike β€” 1st April 2026 (Delhi)

  • Commercial LPG prices increased by β‚Ή195.50 per 19-kg cylinder on April 1, 2026. A 19-kg cylinder now costs β‚Ή2,078.50 in Delhi β€” up from β‚Ή1,883 earlier.
  • This is the second monthly increase, following a β‚Ή114.50 rise in March. The hike affects restaurants, hotels, and small businesses. The adjustment indicates that prior increases in international prices, along with possible margin realignments, are still being passed through in the domestic market.
  • In comparison, the 14.2 kg domestic LPG cylinder price has increased by only β‚Ή60 (7%), with no change in the latest revision. This indicates a relatively controlled and stable pricing approach for household consumers, in contrast to the continued upward adjustments in the commercial segment.
  • International LPG benchmarks have also seen increases over the period, with Mont Belvieu prices rising by β‚Ή110 (25%) and Landed CIF prices by β‚Ή125 (20%) on 1st Apr'26 as compared to 1st Feb'26. However, the magnitude of increase in commercial LPG prices, particularly in absolute terms, remains notably higher than that of domestic cylinders.

India’s LPG import slump in March'26 signals Gulf disruption impact, triggers strategic shift toward US supply

  • India’s LPG import profile shifted sharply in March, with total volumes declining 31.5% MoM to 1,462 KT (down 674 KT), driven by a steep 59.9% drop in Gulf supplies (ex-Iran) to 788 KT (-1,177 KT), reducing their share from 92.0% to 53.9% amid disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz.
  • This was partially offset by a surge in imports from the United States, which rose 374% MoM to 533 KT (+421 KT), lifting its share to 36.5%, alongside incremental volumes from Iran (42 KT, +139%), the Russian Federation (32 KT), Indonesia (23 KT, +27.9%), and Argentina (23 KT).
  • Despite this rebalancing, the shift toward long-haul cargoes implies higher freight intensity and longer supply chains, reinforcing near-term tightness and upward pressure on delivered LPG costs.

India’s LPG balance under pressure as Hormuz disruptions persist, with vessel arrivals providing short-term supply relief

  • India’s LPG supply–demand balance remains under near-term pressure amid geopolitical disruptions, with domestic demand estimated at 92.6–95.0 KT/day (~33 MMT annually), of which 55–60 KT/day (60–65%) is met through imports and ~35 KT/day from domestic production; notably, ~90% of imports transit through the Strait of Hormuz, creating significant exposure to ongoing disruptions.
  • Recent vessel inflows have provided partial relief, with Hellas Gladiator (24 KT, Netherlands) and Gas Jupiter (24 KT, United States) having arrived on March 30 at Ennore Port and Visakhapatnam Port respectively, followed by BW TYR reaching Mumbai on March 31; BW ELM is expected to arrive at Mangaluru on April 1 after successfully transiting the Strait of Hormuz under Indian Navy escort as part of Operation Urja Suraksha.
  • Earlier arrivals of Jag Vasant and Pine Gas (combined 92.6 KT; March 26–27) added roughly one day of national demand cover, along with the previously discharged Shivalik and Nanda Devi cargoes (92.5 KT; March 15–16) offering temporary relief despite persistent structural supply risks.