Abstract:Crude oil prices have spiked dangerously as tanker traffic in the Strait of Hormuz halts and Iran threatens to target regional energy infrastructure. Analysts warn that a sustained blockade could push oil beyond $108 per barrel, complicating the global inflation outlook.

Crude oil prices are reacting violently to what traders fear is the “worst-case scenario” for global energy supply: a blockade of the Hormuz Strait. The geopolitical escalation has triggered significant intraday volatility across energy benchmarks.
Digital signals indicate that oil tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz—a waterway responsible for 20-30% of global oil supply—has effectively flatlined. Reports confirm three vessels were attacked near the entrance to the Persian Gulf.
In response to potential targets, the IRGC has issued explicit threats to destroy regional energy infrastructure, transforming shipping risks from theoretical to imminent physical destruction.
Goldman Sachs commodities data suggests the most destructive risk profile is a “sustained total interruption,” while Bloomberg Economics estimates that a prolonged blockade could see prices gap up to $108 per barrel immediately.
The energy shock comes at a fragile moment for central banks. With US Producer Price Index (PPI) already coming in hotter than expected, a war-driven oil spike risks unanchoring inflation expectations.
BNP Paribas notes that traders are closely monitoring conflict duration. If the US is drawn into a ground war, the resulting oil shock could force the Federal Reserve to keep rates higher for longer.