Will oil prices drop quickly after the Iran conflict ends?
President Trump has argued that oil prices will drop rapidly once the Iran nuclear threat is addressed. Whether those declines materialize quickly depends on how fast conflict risks unwind and how much physical supply was actually disrupted versus temporarily priced-in by markets.
According to Standard Chartered, price normalization hinges on the reversal of any logistical or shipping disruptions; its market view outlines a short-duration conflict scenario that would allow a faster retreat from recent highs, alongside a slower path if hostilities persist. The emphasis is on conditions rather than guarantees, linking outcomes directly to de-escalation and restored flows.
According to the federal reserve’s Governor Neel Kashkari, without prolonged supply disruptions the inflation impulse from higher energy may prove temporary, reducing the risk that price spikes propagate into broader, persistent cost pressures. That framing implies energy prices could ease as risk premia fade rather than remain embedded in headline inflation.
Why prices spiked: risk premium vs. real supply disruption
The latest jump in crude reflects a risk premium, markets compensating for geopolitical uncertainty, more than a confirmed, lasting loss of supply. In early phases of conflict, headlines and threats to shipping can move futures faster than physical flows adjust or inventories are drawn.
“The recent spike in energy prices is driven more by market fear than by physical supply shortages,” said Chris Wright, U.S. Secretary of Energy at the Department of Energy. He also indicated the market reaction should be measured in weeks rather than months in a worst-case scenario and emphasized that the U.S. is not targeting Iran’s energy infrastructure.
As noted by William Jackson at Capital Economics, the scale and duration of the conflict, and the degree of Iranian retaliation, will determine whether spillovers intensify or stabilize. Analysts cited by The Motley Fool similarly judged that while war-related tensions can push prices higher in the near term, those levels are unlikely to persist if physical supply remains largely intact.
Strait of Hormuz: the choke point shaping near-term oil risk
According to Jim Krane at Rice University’s Baker Institute, the most acute price risks arise if Iran blocks or materially restricts passage through the Strait of Hormuz, since a sustained disruption there would amplify market stress. The channel’s vulnerability makes conflict duration and navigational safety central to any timeline for normalization.
As reported by The Guardian, nearly 20% of global oil supply transits the Strait of Hormuz, so even the threat of closure can elevate risk premia meaningfully. That geometry explains why shipping security and insurance costs can move ahead of any confirmed production loss.
According to AP News, Rory Johnston of Commodity Context said oil inventories were relatively high before the conflict, which helps cushion price moves and may limit peak extremes if barrels keep moving. Inventories cannot offset a full maritime stoppage, but they can bridge shorter disruptions long enough for new routes or policy responses to take effect.
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