Energy analysts were deeply divided on Monday about the ultimate ceiling for oil prices in the current crisis, with estimates ranging from a relatively contained move to 90 dollars a barrel in a short-disruption scenario to alarming forecasts of 130 dollars or beyond if the Strait of Hormuz remains closed for months. The uncertainty in the forecasts reflects the genuinely unprecedented nature of the current supply disruption and the extraordinary difficulty of predicting the trajectory of a rapidly evolving military conflict.
At the optimistic end of the analytical spectrum, some analysts argued that the current price spike already incorporates significant risk premium that would unwind rapidly if there were any diplomatic progress toward reopening the Strait of Hormuz or restoring Qatari LNG production. In this view, much of the 13% intraday surge in Brent crude reflected panic and uncertainty rather than a precise assessment of the fundamental supply shortfall. If the conflict proves shorter than initial assessments suggest, or if diplomatic channels produce progress more quickly than expected, prices could fall back sharply from their current elevated levels.
A more cautious middle group of analysts was forecasting a sustained period of elevated prices in the 80 to 95 dollar range for Brent crude, based on the assumption that the conflict will last four to six weeks and that the Strait of Hormuz will be partially functional within that timeframe. This scenario assumes some drawdown of strategic petroleum reserves to bridge the supply gap, some increase in production from non-Middle Eastern producers, and some demand reduction in response to higher prices. In this scenario, gas prices also remain elevated but begin to ease somewhat as alternative LNG supply is secured.
At the pessimistic end of the analytical range, some analysts were flagging scenarios in which oil could reach 120 to 130 dollars or beyond. These scenarios involve an extended conflict lasting two to three months or more, a sustained complete closure of the Strait of Hormuz, significant damage to Qatari and other regional energy infrastructure, and potential secondary effects including disruption to oil and gas production in other parts of the Middle East. In these scenarios, the supply shock is large enough and sustained enough to overwhelm the buffering capacity of strategic reserves and demand reduction, driving prices to levels not seen in many years.
For energy planners, businesses, and policymakers trying to make decisions in the current environment, the range of analyst forecasts creates profound uncertainty. Planning for 90 dollar oil requires very different responses than planning for 130 dollar oil. The uncertainty is itself economically damaging, as businesses delay investment decisions and consumers postpone major purchases while waiting for greater clarity about the energy price environment. Managing through this uncertainty, while maintaining the strategic perspective to plan for multiple scenarios, is one of the most challenging tasks facing energy market participants in the weeks and months ahead.