Fereidun Fesharaki's March 31, 2026 forecast that oil could rise to $150-$200 per barrel within weeks if the Strait of Hormuz remains in a 'near-closure' state has refocused market attention on chokepoint risk and global energy security (Bloomberg, Mar 31, 2026). The projection, articulated on "Insight with Haslinda Amin," is blunt in its immediacy: a sustained interruption of exports through the Hormuz corridor — which historically carries roughly 21 million barrels per day of seaborne oil flows (U.S. EIA, 2024) — would materially tighten already constrained physical markets. A surge to $150-$200 would represent a step-change versus recent trading ranges and would have pronounced fiscal and macro implications for oil-importing countries, markets and portfolios. This article dissects the underlying supply dynamics, quantifies the potential market response using available data, and sets out practical considerations for institutional investors and market participants.
Context
The Strait of Hormuz sits at the center of global crude logistics: in recent reporting the U.S. Energy Information Administration estimated roughly 20–21 million barrels per day of seaborne crude and liquids transited the chokepoint in 2023–24, equivalent to about 20% of global oil flows and nearly 20% of global liquid fuels consumption (EIA, 2024). Disruption scenarios differ by duration and scope: a 48-hour closure produces short-term shipping delays and margin impacts, while a weeks‑long near‑closure compresses seaborne exports and forces downstream rationing and refinery run reductions. Policymakers and market-makers price in both physical tightness and financial volatility; futures curves, volatility indices and shipping rates all adjust rapidly once a credible supply interruption is perceived. Fesharaki's call is notable because it layers an aggressive price projection onto a historically validated mechanism — chokepoint-induced supply shortfalls — rather than relying solely on demand-side narratives.
The broader macro backdrop amplifies the potential shock. Global liquids consumption has rebounded since the pandemic and, according to the International Energy Agency, averaged approximately 101 million barrels per day in 2024 (IEA, 2025), leaving relatively limited spare capacity to absorb a sudden loss of exports. OPEC+ spare crude production capacity in recent quarters has been thin by historical standards; IEA and OPEC reporting in 2025–26 noted collective spare capacity concentrated in a handful of producers and often below 3–4 mb/d, versus the 6–10 mb/d buffer seen in calmer cycles (OPEC Monthly Oil Market Report, 2025). In short: the system lacks a deep, rapid substitution mechanism for multi-million-barrel-per-day disruption originating in the Gulf.
The historical precedent is instructive. Price spikes tied to supply-path disruptions have occurred before: the 1979 Iranian revolution and the 1990 Iraq invasion both produced multi-month shocks and economic dislocations, and Brent briefly crossed the $147/bbl threshold in 2008 during a period of strong demand and limited spare capacity (Bloomberg historical price series). Those episodes differed in demand elasticity, global inventory buffers and financial market structure; however, the economic cost of short-lived but severe spikes was visible in inflation, policy tightening and demand destruction. Investors and risk committees should therefore treat Fesharaki's projection as a scenario worthy of contingency planning rather than a probabilistic forecast.
Data Deep Dive
Fesharaki's $150-$200/bbl range is anchored to a scenario in which seaborne exports through Hormuz fall materially below the ~20–21 mb/d baseline reported by the EIA (2024) for an extended period. If, for example, 8–10 mb/d of flows were curtailed for multiple weeks, the near-term market would see immediate physical shortages relative to refinery intake needs; this scale of disruption is consistent with price moves that would push forward curves well beyond current backwardation or contango structures. Financially, front-month Brent and WTI futures would likely experience a sharp gap-up, implied volatility would spike (as seen in prior incidents where the CBOE Crude Oil Volatility Index rose several hundred percent intra-week), and prompt differentials would widen by tens of dollars per barrel.
Quantifying elasticities: with global demand at ~101 mb/d and OECD commercial inventories hovering near five-year averages in late 2025 (IEA and national agencies), an 8 mb/d shortfall cannot be trivially replaced. Historically, price responses to supply shocks of 5–10 mb/d have varied — for example, 2008's price peak reflected not only lost supplies but also speculative flows and constrained refining capacity — but in a market with tight spare capacity, the first-order price response is large. Shipping indicators corroborate the underlying severity: Strait transit delays increase tanker days and charter rates; Baltic Clean and Dirty indices historically jumped 30–200% in acute disruptions, raising delivered costs further for importers.
Policy variables also matter numerically. The U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve in 2025 stood at roughly 340 million barrels (U.S. DOE/EIA reporting), a stock that could blunt a short-lived shock if coordinated releases occurred, but such releases are limited relative to daily global flows and would only partially offset a multi-week export collapse. Similarly, international release pools (e.g., IEA coordinated releases) are capped by treaty limits and political willingness; a 60-day coordinated release at a notional 3 mb/d would remove ~180 million barrels from reserves, still leaving structural tightness if seaborne flows remained restricted. Thus, the arithmetic of reserves vs. lost flows reinforces the plausibility — though not the certainty — of Fesharaki's upper-range scenario.
Sector Implications
A price surge toward $150–$200/bbl would create asymmetric winners and losers across the energy complex. Upstream producers with high operating leverage and export capacity — notably integrated majors and national oil companies with Gulf-facing infrastructure — would see immediate revenue gains; for example, a $60 move above a $90 baseline on 3 mb/d of net exported barrels translates into roughly $180 million incremental revenue per day for a one‑mb/d exporter. Conversely, refiners with narrow margins and fixed-slate operations would face feedstock cost shocks and negative crack spreads, particularly in regions reliant on Gulf imports. Petrochemical margins would also experience pressure, pushing through to input costs for downstream industries.
Capital markets would price in sector rotation. Energy equities (XOM, CVX, SHEL) typically trade on a forward-looking multiple of cash flow where each $10 incremental move in oil prices materially expands earnings per share for highly leveraged upstream projects; in prior spikes, integrated majors saw P/E reratings and free‑cash-flow yields re-rate compressively. Credit markets would re-assess sovereign and corporate risks in oil-importing economies: countries running current account deficits financed by energy imports could see sovereign spreads widen, while balance-sheet stress could emerge in corporates lacking hedges. Index-level impacts would also be material: a sustained, large oil shock historically contributes to inflation surprises and central-bank policy tightening, pressuring risk assets broadly (SPX) and select bond markets.
Regional differences would matter: Asian refiners dependent on Gulf grades would face more acute supply-side margin compression relative to North American peers that can access domestic or Canadian heavy barrels. Shipping and insurance markets would also react: insurers have historically increased war-risk premiums in Gulf transits, and higher freight rates would amplify delivered costs, particularly for light distillate-dependent economies. Those dynamics underscore the value of granular, location-specific stress testing for institutional portfolios and corporate procurement strategies.
Risk Assessment
Probability assignment is the central analytic challenge. Fesharaki's scenario rests on two hinge events: a prolonged functional near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz and an inability of alternative supply channels to compensate quickly. Political-military risk models suggest that full and permanent closure is low-probability but that effective near-closure — caused by mine-laying, missile strikes, or insurance and commercial avoidance — has a materially higher probability on short time horizons given recent regional tensions. Scenario-based stress testing should therefore weight both duration and depth: a one-week near-closure produces a different macro shock than a six-week event.
Market structure and behavioral risk amplify outcomes. Physical markets are brittle in the presence of concentrated flows and lean inventories; financial markets can overshoot due to liquidity fragility, margin calls and forced selling in other asset classes. The feedback loop between rising oil prices and policy responses (currency interventions, fiscal releases, central bank tightening) creates nonlinear outcomes for equities and sovereign bonds. For institutional investors, the principal operational risks are counterparty exposures in derivatives, margining of commodity-linked collateral, and the liquidity profile of asset holdings in stressed markets.
Mitigation levers exist but are costly and time-sensitive. Hedging through swaps and options can protect cash flows but at an explicit cost and potential basis risk. Diversified energy exposure, contingency funding lines, and scenario-triggered rebalancing thresholds can preserve optionality. Corporate risk committees should map out counterfactuals: how long can a counterparty meet commitments under a $150 oil price, what are the FX implications for dollar‑denominated debts in emerging markets, and what contractual protections exist for passthrough of elevated input costs?
Fazen Capital Perspective
At Fazen Capital we view Fesharaki's projection as a high-impact, non-linear tail scenario that requires active scenario planning rather than passive observance. Our contrarian view is twofold: first, markets often conflate political intensity with prolonged physical closure; the more probable outcome is episodic near‑closures that cause acute but short-lived price spikes followed by structural adjustments (diversions, releases, re‑routing) within 4–10 weeks. Second, the market's reflexive pricing — rapid long positions in futures and option skew — can create short-lived opportunities for disciplined liquidity providers and relative-value strategies that are pre-funded to capitalize on mean reversion once physical flows normalize.
Operationally, we stress-test portfolios for a 6–8 week disruption that removes 6–8 mb/d of seaborne flows and assume coordinated reserve releases partly offset the shortfall by 2–3 mb/d. Under that construct, top-line oil prices may reach Fesharaki's lower range ($150) for short windows but are unlikely to remain at $200 absent simultaneous refinery outages or extended geopolitical escalation. This calibrated, contrarian stance — acknowledging the plausibility of severe spikes while assigning lower persistence probability — informs defensive positioning in our institutional research: selectively hedge real‑money flows, augment physical logistics visibility, and maintain liquidity buffers to exploit dislocations rather than capitulate to headline volatility.
For further reading on structural oil-market dynamics and contingency approaches, see our insights on supply-chain resilience and commodity hedging strategies [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en). We also maintain a rolling suite of scenario models that calibrate margin and liquidity impacts for institutional portfolios; contact our research desk to access tailored simulations [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Outlook
In the near term, markets will price real-time signals: confirmed disruptions to tanker transit, insurance premium announcements, and credible military escalations will cause immediate repricing across futures, options and equity markets. If the Strait returns to functioning levels quickly, expect pronounced volatility and mean reversion within weeks; if disruptions persist beyond four weeks, broader macro impacts — notably higher headline inflation and earlier central-bank tightening — become more probable. Chronologically, monitor the following indicators as proximate triggers: daily reported tanker transits through Hormuz, IOC export nominations from Gulf terminals, IEA/OECD coordinated reserve discussions, and shifts in OPEC+ rhetoric regarding incremental output.
Over a 12-month horizon, structural variables — energy transition policies, investment cycles in non‑OPEC supply, and demand elasticity in emerging markets — will determine whether an acute spike translates into a higher long-term price floor or a transitory dislocation. A temporary surge is more consistent with historical chokepoint disturbances, but persistent elevated prices could reaccelerate investment in supply-adding projects (deepwater, US shale reactivation) and shift the trajectory of the energy transition. Institutional investors should therefore plan for scenario flexibility: tactical hedges for weeks-long tail risks, and strategic allocations that reflect longer-term supply/demand fundamentals.
Bottom Line
Fesharaki's $150–$200/bbl projection is a credible high-impact scenario that should be incorporated into stress tests; probability-weighting should reflect low persistence but high systemic consequences. Institutional managers should prioritize scenario planning, liquidity readiness and targeted hedging rather than reliance on centralised risk pools alone.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
