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The Strait of Hormuz no longer scares the market—showing that oil-price trading logic has changed
In the past, whenever there was the slightest whiff of trouble in the Strait of Hormuz, the oil market reacted as if it had been stepped on. Prices would jump first. But this time, after the White House denied the US-Iran draft, the market didn’t over-amplify geopolitical risk. Instead, it shifted its focus to how high interest rates suppress demand. This shows that oil-price trading logic is changing: slowly moving from “fearing a supply disruption” to “fearing there isn’t enough demand.”
This doesn’t mean geopolitical risk isn’t important. It’s just that the market is starting to realize that risks on the supply side can be triggered by headlines, but weakness on the demand side is harder to reverse. High interest rates affect corporate investment, transportation activity, and end-consumer spending. Oil demand is like a faucet that’s being tightened little by little—it won’t shut off immediately, but the flow will become less and less. Traders obviously understand this, so they’ve started to watch macro data more closely, rather than only staring at the map of the Middle East.
But oil prices also have support. Low inventories mean the market doesn’t have much of a buffer; if another surprise hits the supply side, prices will rebound quickly. In other words, in the short term, oil prices are more like a tug-of-war between “macro suppression” and “inventory support.” You can think of it this way: the market isn’t betting on whether oil prices will collapse. It’s betting on whether they get pulled down first by weak demand, or pushed back up first by inventories.
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