US / Israel–Iran War · Crude Market Update
Last Updated: 24 Mar 2026

Market / War Update
  • The US President Trump announced on 23rd Mar'26 that the US and Iran have had 'major points of agreement' in recent talks, suggesting a deal could be reached soon to settle the war.
  • Trump said his Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and close aide Jared Kushner spoke with the Iranians, and discussions would continue. He added that if the talks work out, the Strait of Hormuz will be 'opened very soon' and jointly controlled.
  • The US Energy Secretary Chris Wright said global oil prices have not climbed enough to cause demand destruction, even as they remain near $100 a barrel due to the US-Israeli war on Iran. The Trump administration is releasing oil from the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve and prioritizing oil supply to Asian refineries.
  • Japan plans to release oil from joint stockpiles held by producing nations in the country by the end of Mar'26. According to IEA, Japan's contribution to a record oil stockpile release coordinated by the International Energy Agency will total nearly 80 million barrels, consisting mainly of crude oil.
  • Iraq declared force majeure on all oilfields developed by foreign companies due to military operations disrupting navigation through the Strait of Hormuz, halting most of the country's crude exports.
  • The Strait of Hormuz is a chokepoint for around 20% of global oil and liquefied natural gas supplies. Iraq's Oil Minister Hayan Abdel-Ghani said crude production at Basra Oil Company has been cut to 0.90 MBpd from 3.3 MBpd, straining the country's already fragile finances as it relies on crude sales for nearly all public spending and more than 90% of its income.
  • Saudi Aramco, the world's top oil exporter, has cut crude supply to Asian buyers for a second month in April due to the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran disrupting trade via the Strait of Hormuz.
  • The producer is supplying only Arab Light crude exported from the Red Sea port of Yanbu to term customers in Apr'26, keeping supplies to Asian refineries tight and capping their refined products output. Saudi Arabia has exported 4.36 MBpd of crude so far in Mar'26, down from 7.11 MBpd in Feb'26, and the producer is trying to boost crude exports via Yanbu to offset the Strait of Hormuz disruption.
  • Traders have offered Iranian oil to Indian refiners at a premium to ICE Brent after Washington temporarily removed sanctions to ease the energy crisis caused by the US-Israeli war on Iran. India, the world's third-biggest oil importer and consumer, has not received a cargo from Tehran since May 2019 after it came under US pressure not to buy Iranian crude.
  • Two tankers bound for India sailed through the Strait of Hormuz on 23rd Mar'26, as the US President Trump threatened to attack Iran’s power plants.
SPR / IEA

IEA member nations have agreed to a coordinated release of 400 mln bbl — 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 release 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 ★
2026
400 mln bbl
IEA Total Release 400 mln Barrels · agreed
US Contribution 172 mln Barrels · loan structure
First Tranche 86 mln Barrels · open for bids

IEA Region-wise Release Breakdown — As of 15 Mar 2026

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

Key Supply Infrastructure

GCC Bypass Pipelines Running Near Capacity — But Shah Gas Field Ablaze and Fujairah Zone Struck

  • Saudi Arabia's East–West Pipeline and the UAE's ADCOP are fully operational, providing combined bypass capacity of approximately 6.5–7.0 MBpd above pre-conflict export levels. Both lines are running at or near maximum utilisation as of mid-Mar 2026.
  • 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 — or slightly more — for the next 20 to 30 days, providing the Trump administration a window to assess strategic direction.
  • New strikes directly threaten this buffer — 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 & Demand Analysis

War Scenarios Point to Global Supply Deficit of 1.35–1.90 MBpd in 2026; AMJ Quarter Most Severe

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 — 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 — Preferred (Severe Hormuz Disruption)
Period
Supply
Demand
Balance
2025e
103.57
102.94
+0.63
2026p
100.23
102.13
−1.90
JFM '26p
101.80
102.80
−1.00
AMJ '26p
97.10
101.60
−4.50
JAS '26p
100.00
102.00
−2.00
OND '26p
102.00
102.10
−0.10
Scenario 2 — Alternate (Partial Hormuz Disruption)
Period
Supply
Demand
Balance
2025e
103.57
102.94
+0.63
2026p
101.10
102.45
−1.35
JFM '26p
102.10
103.00
−0.90
AMJ '26p
99.10
102.10
−3.00
JAS '26p
100.80
102.30
−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: −1.90 MBpd. AMJ quarter most acute at −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: −1.35 MBpd. Balance returns to flat by OND '26.
Economic Updates
  • The US Dollar Index edged higher in the session, rising from 99.23 to 99.64 level marking a 0.42% increase on a daily basis, though it remains down 0.71% on a weekly basis.
  • The near-term uptick was largely driven by a modest shift in rate expectations, where markets slightly pushed back the timing of cuts from the Federal Reserve, alongside a parallel rise in U.S. Treasury yields.
  • At the same time, ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East continued to support safe-haven demand for the dollar, adding to the upside momentum during the session.
  • The Federal Reserve decided to maintain the federal funds rate unchanged at 3.50%-3.75%, emphasizing its commitment to maximum employment and returning inflation to the 2% target. While uncertainty around the economic outlook remains elevated, particularly due to developments in West Asia, the Fed slightly revised up its GDP growth projections, kept unemployment broadly unchanged, and raised inflation projections for 2026–2027, signaling a more persistent inflation outlook.
Price Outlook

Brent Expected to Trade 90–120 USD/bbl

Brent Crude 1M Futures are expected to trade in a range of 90 USD/bbl to 120 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 — Projected 1–2 Week Trading Range
$90 floor $105 base $120 ceiling
$90–$105 · Supply buffers holding
$105–$120 · Elevated war premium