
Anas Alhajji warns that the escalating Iran war could push oil prices to unprecedented levels, potentially driving Brent above $120 per barrel. He cites a likely sharp reduction in Iranian output and limited OPEC spare capacity as key supply constraints. The heightened geopolitical risk is expected to tighten global markets and increase price volatility. Such a surge would reverberate across energy‑intensive industries and consumer pricing.
Geopolitical turbulence has long been a catalyst for oil market swings, and the current Iran war intensifies that pattern. Historical precedents, such as the 1990‑91 Gulf conflict, show how even brief disruptions can erase years of supply growth, sending futures soaring. Analysts now project that Iran’s reduced export capacity—potentially a loss of several million barrels per day—will tighten the global balance, especially as other major producers face production caps or maintenance constraints.
In the short term, OPEC’s ability to smooth the shock is constrained by dwindling spare capacity and internal disagreements over output adjustments. With the organization’s buffer estimated at under two million barrels per day, market participants are turning to speculative positions, driving Brent and WTI futures toward record territory. Downstream sectors, from airlines to petrochemicals, are already recalibrating budgets, while traders hedge exposure through futures, options, and alternative commodities. The heightened price outlook also fuels discussions about strategic petroleum reserves releases as a temporary stabilizer.
Beyond immediate price spikes, sustained high oil levels threaten to reignite inflationary pressures worldwide. Consumer fuel costs rise, squeezing household budgets and prompting central banks to consider tighter monetary policies. Corporations face higher operating expenses, prompting a faster pivot to renewable energy sources and efficiency upgrades. Investors, meanwhile, are diversifying into clean‑energy assets and inflation‑linked instruments, reshaping capital flows across the energy sector. The confluence of war‑driven supply risk and macroeconomic stress underscores why oil market watchers must monitor geopolitical developments closely.
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