Supply Coverage Under A Hormuz Disruption
Saudi Arabia has shifted some exports to the west coast. This could extend how long the release eases supply constraints. The article states a conflict duration assumption of 3–4 weeks. It also notes the piece was produced using an AI tool and reviewed by an editor. We saw last year how reports of a potential 300-400 million barrel IEA reserve release calmed the market during the Hormuz disruption. This massive proposed supply injection was intended to cover the supply gap for several weeks. It served as a powerful signal that governments would act to cap runaway price spikes. Looking at the situation today, March 11, 2026, we see a different picture. Global strategic petroleum reserves, particularly in the U.S., are near 40-year lows after the significant drawdowns in 2022 and subsequent smaller releases. This means the ability to repeat such a large-scale intervention is now severely limited.Implications For Volatility And Options Positioning
This lack of a backstop suggests any new geopolitical flare-up could have a much more explosive and sustained impact on crude prices. The CBOE Crude Oil Volatility Index (OVX) is already elevated, hovering around 38, reflecting this underlying market tension. Therefore, we should be prepared for higher volatility compared to what we saw in 2025. For derivative traders, this means long volatility strategies are becoming more attractive. Buying straddles or strangles could prove effective in the coming weeks to capitalize on a significant price move in either direction. Given the thin supply cushion, owning options may be preferable to holding futures contracts directly to manage risk. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.
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