# What's at Stake for Oil Markets as Trump Strikes Iran
**Published: March 2, 2026**
You know that moment when you're watching the news, and you realize something happening halfway around the world is about to hit you right in the wallet?
That's where we are right now.
The U.S.-led strikes on Iran, and Tehran's retaliatory missile attacks across the Persian Gulf, have pushed global energy markets into uncharted territory. Oil prices had already climbed more than 20% since the beginning of 2026, with Brent crude hovering around $73 a barrel . But that was before the real escalation. That was before the Strait of Hormuz—the world's most important oil chokepoint—became a war zone.
Let me walk you through exactly what's at stake for oil markets, how high prices could go, and what this means for Americans filling up their tanks and planning their budgets.
## The Short Version: What You Need to Know
**The immediate impact:** Oil prices have already surged, with Brent crude up about 20% this year to around $73 per barrel . But analysts warn this is just the beginning.
**The Strait of Hormuz factor:** About **20% of the world's oil supply**—roughly 20 million barrels per day—passes through this narrow waterway . Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps announced its closure shortly after the strikes began, and major oil companies and trading firms have suspended shipments .
**The price scenarios:**
- **Contained conflict:** Even if the fighting stays limited, analysts expect Brent to hit **$80 per barrel**
- **Protracted disruption:** If the Strait remains threatened or closed, oil could surge to **$100 per barrel**
- **Worst-case escalation:** A full-blown regional war with sustained supply disruptions could drive prices into **triple digits**
**The political stakes:** President Trump is betting that U.S. strategic reserves can offset price spikes, but higher gasoline prices ahead of November's midterm elections could be politically devastating . His approval ratings are already struggling .
**What this means for you:** Higher gas prices, potential inflation pressures, and possible delays for interest rate cuts the Fed had been considering .
## The Strait of Hormuz: Why This Small Waterway Matters So Much
Let's start with geography, because understanding the Strait of Hormuz is key to understanding everything else.
This narrow channel between Iran and Oman is the only sea passage from the Persian Gulf to the open ocean. That means every barrel of oil from Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, and the UAE must pass through it.
**Table 1: The Strait of Hormuz by the Numbers**
| **Metric** | **Value** | **Source** |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Share of global oil supply | 20% | |
| Barrels per day | ~20 million | |
| Share of global LNG trade | 20% | |
| Alternative pipeline capacity | 2.6 million bpd max | |
| Current risk premium in prices | $5-6 per barrel | |
According to maritime analytics site Marine Tracker, traffic through the artery has plummeted, with a slew of oil tankers turning around or being stopped at the strait . Local Iranian media reported that the Revolutionary Guards had warned "various ships" that the strait was currently unsafe to navigate due to the attacks and therefore effectively closed . Washington also warned ships about safety risks in the Gulf .
**Jakob Larsen**, safety chief at shipping association BIMCO, noted that U.S. air and navy assets could re-establish shipping security if Washington chose to do so . But that would mean a sustained military commitment in the region.
**The bypass problem:** Only Saudi Arabia and the UAE have pipelines that can bypass the strait, and their combined capacity is just **2.6 million barrels per day** —a fraction of the 20 million that normally flows through . If the strait stays closed, most of that oil simply can't get out.
## The Price Scenarios: How High Could Oil Go?
Analysts across major financial institutions are running the numbers, and the range of outcomes is unusually wide.
**Table 2: Oil Price Scenarios Under Different Conflict Outcomes**
| **Scenario** | **Brent Price** | **Conditions** |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Pre-conflict baseline | $65-70 | Normal market conditions |
| Current situation | $73 | With $5-6 risk premium |
| Contained conflict | $80 | Even if fighting limited, supply uncertainty persists |
| Sustained Hormuz threat | $90-100 | Shipping disrupted, insurance premiums spike |
| Full Hormuz closure | $100+ | Physical supply cuts of 5-10+ million bpd |
**William Jackson**, chief economist for emerging markets at Capital Economics, predicts that even if the conflict is brought under control, Brent crude oil prices could still rise to around **$80 per barrel** —equivalent to the peak recorded during the 12-day conflict in Iran last June .
If the conflict drags on and affects supply, oil prices could surge to around **$100 a barrel** . This could then push global inflation up by 0.6-0.7 percentage points, he stated in a report .
**Kirill Dmitriev**, an economic adviser with direct knowledge of market dynamics, put it more starkly on X: "$100+ oil per barrel soon" .
## The Iranian Supply Factor
Iran itself is a significant producer, though not as dominant as its Gulf neighbors.
**Table 3: Iran's Oil Profile**
| **Metric** | **Value** |
| :--- | :--- |
| Current production | ~3.1-3.3 million bpd |
| Share of global output | ~3% |
| Global production rank | 4th in OPEC |
| Exports | 1.3-1.5 million bpd |
| Destination of exports | 80% to China |
| Production cost | As low as $10 per barrel |
*Sources: *
Iran's oil industry is in far better shape than Venezuela's, another country hit by years of U.S. sanctions . With production costs as low as $10 per barrel, Iranian crude is highly profitable—and Iran gains disproportionately from high global prices .
But Iranian supply is already constrained by sanctions. Before the conflict, Iran was exporting about 1.3-1.5 million barrels per day, with more than 80% going to Chinese refineries . Any disruption to those exports would hit China hard.
**The infrastructure risk:** UBS warned that infrastructure damage in the region could threaten roughly **3.3 million barrels per day of Iranian supply** . That's essentially Iran's entire export capacity.
## The Political Calculations: Trump's Gamble
This is where energy markets meet electoral politics.
President Trump ordered these strikes knowing full well the economic risks. Russian analyst Andrey Koshkin laid out the calculation: "Trump weighed the reaction inside the United States and counted on a positive image that he was supposed to gain from a possible 'small victorious war' in Iran" .
But there's not much time until the midterm congressional elections in November 2026. "If gasoline prices rise, it is not yet clear how all this will end for Trump," Koshkin noted .
The president's approval ratings are already struggling—hovering around 36%, trailing significantly behind the 46% rating the Obama administration held at a similar juncture . High energy costs are a significant political liability .
**Trump's insurance policy:** The U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve holds about 415 million barrels, covering roughly 200 days of net imports . Koshkin noted that Trump "is counting on US strategic reserves to offset these fluctuations. He sees a window of opportunity for himself now — and would like to use it" .
But as Neil Shearing, chief global economist for Capital Economics in London, warned, disruptions to oil and stock markets could mean "suddenly you've got gas prices up and 401(k)'s down" .
## The Global Economic Fallout
Beyond oil prices, this conflict threatens broader economic disruption.
### Shipping and Trade
Within hours of the first U.S. attacks, Hapag-Lloyd, one of the world's largest cargo carriers, suspended all transits through the Strait of Hormuz . Most major ocean carriers are expected to follow .
**Lars Jensen**, CEO of Vespucci Maritime, warned that protracted attacks would likely cause extensive disruption in container shipping, leading to congestion at ports in Oman, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, and Singapore . "Congestion in key hubs could even lead to rate increases on trade not directly going to/from the Gulf," he said .
### Natural Gas
UBS warned that global benchmarks including JKM (Asia), TTF (Europe), and Henry Hub (U.S.) are likely to move higher, citing potential risks to Qatar's **77 million tons per annum LNG supply** and the oil-linked pricing structure of Middle Eastern LNG contracts .
### Inflation and Interest Rates
Higher oil prices could derail the gradual progress on inflation that the Federal Reserve had been forecasting. Inflation is currently running at an annual rate of **3%** , exceeding the Fed's price stability target . The Fed had expected it to cool to 2.5% by year's end.
Higher oil prices could prevent that. If inflation stays elevated, interest rate cuts that markets had been hoping for could be delayed or canceled.
### Stock Markets
Carsten Brzeski, chief economist for ING Germany, warned that war with Iran could mark an end to investor complacency. "We've all grown numb when it comes to these wars and geopolitics," he said. "I think on Monday or in Asia [on Sunday], it would be a surprise if we don't see at least a short-lived [10 percent] correction" .
## The Winners and Losers in Energy Markets
Not everyone loses when oil prices spike.
**U.S. exploration and production companies** are likely to benefit. UBS said it would expect a positive stock reaction for U.S. E&P companies, particularly more leveraged oil names, and said Canadian majors such as CNQ and CVE are well positioned to profit from higher crude prices .
**European defense stocks** have already grown about 10% since the beginning of the year and are likely to see increased demand amid escalating geopolitical tensions .
**Airlines and travel stocks** face the opposite pressure. Higher fuel costs, disrupted routes, and potential cancellations will hit this sector hard.
**The U.S. dollar** presents a complicated picture. CBA analysts noted that the USD index fell about 1% during the war last June, but that decline was short-lived and reversed after 3-4 days . If the conflict drags on and disrupts oil supplies, they expect the U.S. dollar to appreciate against most currencies except the Japanese yen and Swiss franc, because the U.S. is a net energy exporter and could benefit from higher oil and gas prices .
## Frequently Asked Questions
**Q: How much oil actually passes through the Strait of Hormuz?**
A: About 20 million barrels per day, representing roughly 20% of global oil consumption and nearly a third of the world's seaborne-traded crude .
**Q: Could Iran actually block the strait?**
A: Yes, but it would also halt its own exports, depriving Tehran of vital revenue. That's likely part of the reason the strait has never been fully blocked .
**Q: How high could oil prices go?**
A: Analysts project a wide range. A contained conflict could push Brent to $80. A serious supply disruption could drive oil to $90-100. A full Hormuz closure could push prices into triple digits .
**Q: What does this mean for U.S. gas prices?**
A: Higher oil prices translate directly to higher gasoline prices. If Brent hits $80, expect $3.50-4.00 gas. If it goes to $100, $4.50+ gas is likely.
**Q: Does the U.S. have any protection against price spikes?**
A: The Strategic Petroleum Reserve holds about 415 million barrels, covering roughly 200 days of net imports . President Trump has signaled willingness to use it.
**Q: How will this affect inflation?**
A: Capital Economics estimates that oil at $100 could push global inflation up by 0.6-0.7 percentage points . That could delay interest rate cuts.
**Q: What should I do with my investments?**
A: Energy and defense stocks may benefit. Airlines and travel stocks could struggle. But history shows geopolitical selloffs are often temporary—panic-selling is rarely the right move.
**Q: How long could this last?**
A: FGE Nexanteca's Iman Nasseri warned that "there is a high chance this could last weeks, if not months" .
## The Bottom Line
Here's what I keep coming back to.
Oil markets are now caught between two powerful forces: the physical reality of a chokepoint that carries 20% of the world's supply, and the political reality of a president facing midterm elections with his approval ratings underwater .
**The Strait of Hormuz** is the most vulnerable point in global energy infrastructure. Its closure would be catastrophic—not just for oil prices, but for the entire global economy.
**Iran's calculus** is equally stark. Its leadership, reeling from the death of its Supreme Leader, may see no reason for restraint. Attacking Gulf shipping hurts its neighbors, pressures the West, and costs it nothing—literally, since its own exports are already sanctioned.
**The U.S. response** will determine the outcome. Strategic reserves can cushion a price spike, but they can't replace 20 million barrels per day indefinitely. Military action to reopen the strait is possible, but that means sustained commitment.
For American consumers, the next few weeks will tell us whether this is another temporary spike or the beginning of a new era of expensive oil. For President Trump, they'll tell us whether his gamble pays off—or whether higher gas prices cost him the midterms.
One thing is certain: the margin for miscalculation has never been narrower.
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*Got questions about how this affects your specific situation—gas prices, investments, or just peace of mind? Drop them in the comments.*





