Abstract:JP Morgan warns that a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz would exhaust Middle East oil storage capacity within 25 days, potentially forcing a catastrophic halt in production.

New York — While price action grabs headlines, the physical reality of energy logistics presents a far grimmer picture. New analysis from JP Morgan suggests the global energy market is less than a month away from a systemic supply shock if the Strait of Hormuz faces a total blockade.
According to JPMorgans commodities team led by Natasha Kaneva, Middle Eastern producers (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iraq, Kuwait) possess limited onshore and offshore storage buffers.
“Beyond that, storage bottlenecks will force a mandatory shutdown of production,” the bank warned. This would not just be a price shock, but a physical cessation of supply for 20% of the world's oil.
Digital tracking indicates that the “worst-case scenario” is already partially unfolding. Tanker traffic through the Strait has nearly ground to a halt due to insurance prohibitively skyrocketing and physical security threats. Daily crude exports via the route plummeted from a standard 16 million barrels to just 4 million barrels on February 28.
The conflict complicates the Federal Reserve's path. With US Producer Price Index (PPI) data already coming in hotter than expected, a sustained oil rally threatens to unanchor inflation expectations. While US Treasury yields dropped on safe-haven buying (with the 30-year yield down 6 bps), a resurgence of cost-push inflation could force yields back up, trapping the Fed in a policy dilemma.