Summary:
- The North Sea Forties grade traded at a 30-cents-per-barrel discount to Dated Brent on Tuesday.
- It's the first North Sea trade below the Dated Brent benchmark since the US-Israel war with Iran began in February.
- Brent crude crossed $100 a barrel on March 8 and peaked at about $126 during the conflict.
For months, the global oil story has been one direction: up.
Brent broke $100 a barrel. Tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz fell off a cliff.
Then this week, a barrel of physical North Sea crude sold for less than the benchmark, the first discount of the entire war.
A Tiny Discount With A Big Signal
The Forties grade is one of several crude streams that price into Dated Brent, the global oil benchmark. On Tuesday, Forties traded at a 30-cent-per-barrel discount to that benchmark.
It's the first North Sea trade below Dated Brent since the war between the US, Israel, and Iran began.
Bloomberg's Javier Blas described what's happening as a weird split, with plenty of crude available right now and scarcity expected just a few weeks out.
In English: the oil market is calm at the dock and nervous on the calendar.
For a quick read on what global oil prices actually mean for your portfolio, Market Briefs breaks it down every weekday morning, plus a free 45-minute investing masterclass when you sign up.
How We Got Here
The US and Israel launched air strikes against Iran in February, and Iran's Supreme Leader was killed on February 28.
Tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz dropped roughly 70%, and at one point it fell close to zero, with more than 150 ships anchored outside the strait waiting it out.
Brent crossed $100 a barrel for the first time in four years on March 8 and peaked near $126 during the conflict.
Inside that crisis, every drop of seaborne crude was selling at a premium.
Tuesday's North Sea trade is the first crack in that pattern.
That doesn't mean the rally is over. It means there's enough physical oil sloshing around right now that one grade can't hold its premium.
What To Watch
The next test is whether other North Sea grades follow Forties below the benchmark. If they do, traders will start pricing in real relief, not just hope.
Diamondback Energy is already moving on the price signal. Earlier this year, the company said it would boost US shale output in response to oil prices above $80 a barrel.
Tuesday's trade priced like supply was loose. The rest of the curve says it isn't.
Sign up for Market Briefs and get the daily breakdown every weekday morning, plus a free investing course as a bonus.
