Escalation between the United States, Israel, and Iran over the weekend triggered a sharp repricing across global energy markets. Strikes under “Operation Epic Fury” and retaliatory missile activity across the Gulf sent Brent and WTI sharply higher, while Henry Hub natural gas caught a geopolitical bid.
The focal point is the Strait of Hormuz, the chokepoint that carries roughly 20% of global liquid energy consumption. While not officially closed, tanker flows have slowed dramatically as marine insurers reassess war-risk coverage. More than 200 vessels are reportedly idling outside the passage. The market is pricing a worst-case supply shock — but how durable is that premium?
What Are the Real Risks for Energy Markets?
Kar Yong Ang, financial expert at Elev8, highlights two core risks: (1) direct infrastructure damage to oil or LNG assets, and (2) the duration and intensity of the conflict.
“Further escalation that disrupts oil or natural gas infrastructure would be a major bullish catalyst,” Ang notes. “If tensions remain elevated, Brent could test $90 per barrel.”
The key variable isn’t headlines — it’s physical supply. A temporary shipping paralysis can lift prices quickly, but sustained upside requires structural outages or prolonged chokepoint risk.
Investor Takeaway
Crude Oil: Buy the Breakout or Sell the Spike?
After the initial surge, fundamentals may reassert themselves. Saudi Arabia and the UAE maintain spare capacity that can offset partial Iranian disruption. Elevated prices also risk curbing demand — notably from China, which may delay Strategic Petroleum Reserve purchases or pivot further toward discounted Russian crude.
Ang argues that WTI’s fair value sits in the $62–66 range. With prices already probing the mid-$70s, risk-to-reward for fresh longs deteriorates.
“The instinct is to buy the headlines,” Ang says. “But as panic subsides, rallies toward the mid-$70s look like opportunities to fade.”
- Upside trigger: Verified infrastructure damage or formal Hormuz closure
- Downside catalyst: Tanker normalization and OPEC+ supply response
Natural Gas: Is Henry Hub Overreacting?
Henry Hub natural gas may present a cleaner tactical setup. While global LNG benchmarks react directly to Hormuz risk, U.S. gas is primarily governed by domestic supply-demand dynamics.
Weather models indicate an unusually warm start to March — potentially the warmest since 2000 — undermining heating demand. Meanwhile, U.S. production remains near record highs.
“Geopolitical lift in gas prices is a gift for bears,” Ang says, pointing to short opportunities near $3.00 per MMBtu on spring contracts.
- Bear case: Warm weather + strong production = oversupply pressure
- Bull risk: Escalation affecting LNG exports or global arbitrage flows
Investor Takeaway
Positioning in Volatility: Discipline Over Drama
Geopolitical events compress decision timelines. Price moves feel urgent. But sustainable trends require sustained drivers. Traders should monitor:
- Insurance reinstatement and tanker flow normalization
- Official OPEC+ communication on spare capacity
- Satellite confirmation of infrastructure damage
- U.S. weather model updates
If the Strait remains open — even partially — the risk premium may decay quickly. If escalation intensifies, $90 Brent becomes plausible. The difference lies in physical disruption, not rhetoric.
Disclaimer: This article does not constitute investment advice. Trading leveraged products carries significant risk.
About Elev8
Elev8 is a global broker offering multi-asset trading solutions, advanced analytical tools, integrated AI technologies, and responsive client support. The firm combines technology-driven execution with educational resources designed to support informed trading decisions worldwide.





