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Oil Near $115 as War Blocks World's Key Oil Chokepoint

Published Apr 6, 2026
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Large cargo ship anchored in calm water under a cloudy, overcast sky, near a strategic oil chokepoint, with mountainous landforms in the distant background.
Summary:
  • WTI crude near $115, highest since 2022 energy crisis.
  • Oil jumped 71% in four months - from $67 in January to $115 now.
  • Strait blockade adds $14-18 per barrel in war risk.

Oil prices flashing red. WTI crude trades near $115 per barrel, the highest level since 2022 when prices hit the whole world. The shock this time is speed - prices climbed 70% in four months.

The reason is simple: the world's most critical oil passage is shut. The Strait of Hormuz moves 21% of global oil supply. Right now, it's blocked.

War Risk Adds $15-20 to Price

Oil was $67 per barrel before the Iran fight in February. Goldman Sachs says the war risk premium is $14-18 per barrel right now. That's pure panic.

The speed is stunning. January: $61. Early March: $88. Late March: $100. Now: $115. This isn't slow inflation - it's a shock.

Only 62 ships crossed through since March 15. The Strait normally handles hundreds per month. The long route around Africa takes weeks extra and costs more. It's not a real option.

How High Can It Go?

Goldman thinks Brent averages $85 in 2026. But if fighting continues, prices could hit $147 - the 2008 record. The Dallas Fed said closure peaks around $100. We're already 15% above that.

Higher oil means higher gas, higher shipping, higher prices everywhere. That kills the plan to get inflation back to 2%.

What to Watch

Tuesday night matters most. If Iran opens the Strait, oil falls $10-20 on relief. If Trump acts, oil could spike toward $120-130.

Every day blocked, global growth forecasts fall. Markets wait for military news that could come any moment.

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