Chevron (CVX) CEO Mike Wirth stepped up to the podium at S&P Global’s annual CERAWeek conference in Houston on Monday and said what many in the room were quietly thinking: oil markets are not taking this seriously enough.
Chevron Corporation, CVX
Wirth told the crowd that the physical consequences of the Strait of Hormuz closure are already moving through the global energy system — but crude futures are not reflecting that reality.
CVX stock was up 1.73% on the day, even as crude prices tumbled. Brent crude fell 12% to $98.95 a barrel in afternoon trading on March 23, while WTI dropped 11% to $87.73. The drop came after President Trump announced talks with Iran and said he would pause threatened strikes for at least five days.
The numbers behind Wirth’s warning are sobering. According to S&P Global Energy, approximately 6.5 to 7 million barrels of daily oil supply are currently offline in the Middle East. That figure is expected to climb to 8 or 9 million barrels within days.
Around 80% of the oil that normally flows through the Strait of Hormuz is destined for Asia, and the region is already starting to face what Kurt Barrow of S&P Global Energy called an “availability crisis.”
Diesel and jet fuel markets are showing tightness, Wirth said. Even if a ceasefire is reached quickly, restoring production won’t happen overnight. Experts say it could take weeks, months, or even years in some cases.
The WTI futures curve currently shows prices around $82 a barrel in July, falling to the $73 range by December. The market has priced oil to stay in the $70s for most of 2027. Before the conflict, those futures were trading in the $50–60s range.
Wirth’s point is that even this elevated pricing likely isn’t high enough given the physical damage to infrastructure and the scale of supply being taken offline.
WTI briefly hit $101 a barrel and Brent shot to $113 late Sunday on concerns about potential U.S. strikes on Iranian power plants. Prices dropped sharply Monday morning after Trump postponed those strikes.
Goldman Sachs revised its 2026 WTI oil price forecast to $79 a barrel from $72, based on the assumption that Strait of Hormuz oil shipments will remain at roughly 5% of normal levels for at least two more weeks.
CVX has a consensus Strong Buy rating among 21 Wall Street analysts, with 16 Buy and five Hold recommendations. The average price target sits at $197.25.
The post Chevron (CVX) Stock Rises as CEO Warns Oil Futures Are Underpricing Supply Shock appeared first on CoinCentral.


