The global oil market has entered classic backwardation: near-term contracts trade at a sharp premium to longer-dated ones, with Brent December futures at $79.70 (17% below front-month but still 10% above pre-Feb 28 levels). This structure tells two stories at once. First, the market expects the current disruption — missile strikes, Strait of Hormuz congestion, and initial infrastructure damage — to be transitory. Second, it has already embedded a structural risk premium that will keep the long-term price floor elevated even after any ceasefire.
Analysts from BRI Wealth, Mattioli Woods, and FTSE Russell agree the curve’s steep drop after four months signals anticipation of an “off-ramp” Trump is actively seeking. Yet they simultaneously flag that this view may be complacent. Iranian LNG and oil facilities, once hit, require years to rebuild. The 400 kg of 60% enriched uranium cannot be bombed away; Tehran can simply go underground and accelerate weaponization. European gas has not yet repriced to 2022 Ukraine-shock levels, but any sustained Hormuz choke or second-round missile exchange would change that instantly.
Consensus is pricing a quick diplomatic resolution plus intact spare capacity. The futures curve, however, quietly disagrees on the downside: even in the “resolved” scenario, oil settles $10–12 higher than pre-war, reflecting destroyed Iranian capacity that OPEC+ cannot fully offset without drawing down its own buffers. Volatility remains extreme; the curve shape is stable but keeps shifting upward. Markets are therefore simultaneously bullish on de-escalation and quietly hedging for a new, higher price regime.

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