Trump’s oil shield is cracking

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Power Up

Power Up

 

A Reuters Open Interest newsletter

By Ron Bousso, ROI Energy Columnist

 
 

Data refreshes every time you open this email. For more energy news, click here. Please send any feedback to powerup@thomsonreuters.com.

Hello Power Up readers,

I am writing today from Houston, where the leaders of the world’s energy industry are gathering this week for the annual CERAWeek conference. The main topic on the agenda is – you guessed it – the U.S.-Israel war with Iran, which has roiled energy markets and the global economy.

President Donald Trump surprised investors yet again this morning when he published a social media post saying that the U.S. has had “good and productive” conversations with Iran over the “complete resolution of hostilities” in the Middle East. Trump also said he had instructed the military to postpone any strikes against Iranian power plants and energy infrastructure for a five-day period, subject to the success of the talks.

Benchmark Brent crude oil prices dropped by over 10% to around $100 a barrel within seconds of Trump’s social media post. The dollar declined and stocks rose on the news.

Trump’s conciliatory statement marks a sharp reversal from a threat he issued on Saturday to strike Iran’s power plants within 48 hours unless Tehran fully opened the Strait of Hormuz – that narrow sea lane that typically carries a fifth of the world’s oil supplies.

Iran had responded to the ultimatum with defiance, vowing to keep the strait closed and threatening to strike more energy infrastructure across the region, including U.S. assets.

Following Trump’s post on Monday, Iran’s government news agency Fars reported that the belligerents had held no direct or indirect talks and that Trump instead retreated in the face of Tehran’s threat.

The Mehr news agency, citing the foreign ministry, said there were regional initiatives to reduce tensions, but that they should be directed at Washington as Iran did not initiate the war.

While it is still unclear when and how the war will end, energy markets remain in turmoil due to the continued closure of the critical Strait of Hormuz. Britain, France and other allies are preparing a naval mission to help defend the waterway after a public spat with Trump, but they are unlikely to intervene decisively while fighting continues.

The longer the war drags on, the more upward pressure will build on oil prices globally. President Trump went into the Iran war convinced that America’s vast oil wealth would insulate the country from the kind of energy shock now battering much of the world. Four weeks into the conflict, that shield is looking fragile.

More on this below.

Here are some more headlines:

  • The crude oil futures markets are still largely pricing in an early resolution to the Middle East conflict that results in the full re-opening of the Strait of Hormuz. But in doing so, the market is actually making it more likely the critical waterway will remains closed, argues ROI Asia Commodities Columnist Clyde Russell.
  • Saudi Aramco, the world's top oil exporter, has cut crude supply to Asian buyers for the second consecutive month amid the war. The producer is supplying only Arab Light ⁠crude exported from the Red Sea port of Yanbu to term customers in April.
  • The International Energy Agency is consulting with governments in ‌Asia and Europe on the release of more stockpiled oil "if necessary" due to the Iran war, Executive Director Fatih Birol said on Monday.

As always, don’t hesitate to contact me at ron.bousso@thomsonreuters.com or follow me on LinkedIn with any questions or thoughts.

 
 

Top energy headlines

  • US energy chief tells CNBC a further SPR oil release is unlikely
  • CERAWEEK US, TotalEnergies to shift $1 billion from wind to oil and gas
  • UK considers expanding regulatory powers to tackle energy price gouging, profiteering
  • CERAWEEK US needs more energy development to power AI, Google president says 
  • CERAWEEK Rise in oil prices slowing global economic growth, says ADNOC CEO
 
 

Cracks in the shield

President Trump’s wager that the United States will be shielded from the full impact of the Mideast conflict has only partly paid off, with domestic crude prices rising by around 50% to $99 a barrel since the start of the war on February 28, compared with a 55% rise in the global Brent crude benchmark.

America’s relative advantage, however, is eroding fast.

With Middle Eastern supplies constrained, buyers in Asia and Europe are increasingly turning to alternative sources – including the U.S. – for crude oil, refined fuels and natural gas. That global scramble is pulling more U.S. hydrocarbons into the international market and tightening supplies at home.

U.S. crude exports are on track to hit a record 4.6 million barrels per day in March, according to analytics firm Kpler. Exports of refined products, mainly gasoline and diesel, are also expected to reach an all-time high of about 3.2 million bpd.

The lesson is blunt: in interconnected oil markets, domestic abundance does not buy immunity.

Read the full column
 

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