The world just opened its biggest oil emergency valve ever. Markets shrugged.
What Was Announced
The IEA agreed Wednesday to release 400 million barrels from emergency stockpiles held by its 32 member countries — the largest coordinated reserve release in the agency's 52-year history.
The previous record was 182.7 million barrels, released after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022. This one is more than double that.
IEA Director Fatih Birol called the challenges "unprecedented in scale." French President Macron put the 400 million barrels in context: roughly 20 days' worth of what the Strait of Hormuz moved before the war.
Why Analysts Are Skeptical
Macquarie analysts estimated the release covers about four days of global production. "If that doesn't sound like much, it isn't," they wrote.
Citigroup puts the daily supply loss from the Hormuz blockade at 11 to 16 million barrels. The IEA hasn't set a timeline for releases, and it takes 13 days for U.S. SPR oil to reach the open market after a presidential order.
Export volumes through the Strait are currently at less than 10% of prewar levels.
What Actually Fixes This
Birol said it himself: "The most important thing for a return to stable flows is the resumption of transit through the Strait of Hormuz."
The reserve release buys time. It doesn't reopen a waterway.
Brent was still above $90 after the announcement — down from $119 earlier this week, but still 25% above pre-war levels. Gas nationally sits at $3.49/gallon.
The IEA has done this six times ever. This one had to be twice as large as any of them.
