Hormuz Reopening Won't Mean Immediate Normalization

The Middle East war has entered a fragile ceasefire, offering tentative relief to energy and financial markets. Oil prices have eased and volatility has subsided, feeding hopes that the worst disruptions may be passing.

Yet even if peace were declared tomorrow, the global supply chain would not snap back to normal. Disruptions will linger for months, long after the headlines fade.

Oil extraction in the Middle East could resume relatively quickly, but shipping flows would be uneven and constrained. Tankers have moved out of the region, and these large, slow vessels will need weeks to navigate back. Higher insurance costs are set to linger.

Downstream fuel markets will adjust far more slowly. Damage done to refineries for jet fuel will limit production; using alternative facilities is difficult because of strict specifications. In periods of scarcity, jet fuel is routinely deprioritized in favor of gasoline or diesel. With refinery repair timelines extending well beyond the normalization of shipping, aviation fuel supply and pricing are likely to remain dislocated.

Read more: The Outlook From, and For, the IMF

Natural gas markets face similar headwinds. Damage to infrastructure in one of the world’s largest producing regions implies a recovery path to full production that is measured in years, not months.