The entire system is already stretched,” Hansen explains. “If Oil accelerates from here, it won’t stay contained within Energy markets. It spreads everywhere.”
The Strait of Hormuz Threatens Global Supply
At the centre of the current crisis lies the Strait of Hormuz – one of the most strategically important shipping corridors in the world. The narrow waterway between Oman and Iran carries roughly 20 million barrels of Oil every day, representing nearly one fifth of global petroleum consumption.
At just 21 miles wide, with shipping lanes only two miles across in each direction, the strait is an unavoidable chokepoint for global Energy supply. Any disruption quickly cascades through the global system.
With shipping currently facing severe disruption and Iranian strikes forcing Qatar – the world’s second-largest liquefied natural gas supplier – to halt production, European Gas prices have surged more than 70% in just three trading sessions.
“It’s a double punch,” Hansen notes “Europe is only just emerging from its last Energy crunch and now the next one is arriving.”
Inflation Risks Are Rising Again
The consequences are already beginning to appear in inflation data. Even before this week’s surge in Crude Oil and Gas prices, inflation readings in both the United States and the Eurozone were climbing faster than expected.
Oil prices are now up more than 40% year-to-date. If energy costs remain elevated, inflation could reaccelerate sharply, limiting central banks’ ability to cut interest rates and potentially reigniting the cost-of-living crisis across developed economies.
Energy costs feed directly into food production, transportation, manufacturing and electricity generation. As one analyst warned this week, the scale of the disruption could become “three times the severity of the 1970s Oil embargo” if supply interruptions persist.
Strategic reserves can cushion the initial shock. But if disruptions last several weeks, storage capacity fills quickly and production shutdowns begin. At that stage, prices tend to move vertically.
The Beginning of an Oil Supercycle?
For Hansen, the deeper implication lies in what may be the early stages of a new Oil Supercycle.
“This is precisely how major Commodity bull cycles begin,” he says. “They start under-owned, underestimated and dismissed – until price forces recognition.”
Hansen argues that Oil today resembles Gold roughly eighteen months before its historic breakout. Pressure has been quietly building beneath the surface, while global capital allocation to Energy remains historically low.
“The opportunity isn’t hidden in complexity,” Hansen explains. “It is visible in tanker routes, Energy storage levels and demand data. Ultimately it is measured in barrels.”
If the current disruption evolves into a sustained supply shock, the implications extend far beyond Oil markets alone. Energy becomes the anchor for inflation expectations and when that anchor moves sharply higher, it forces a repricing across Currencies, Bonds, Equities and Commodities simultaneously.
In that environment, the real story will not simply be that Oil prices surged. It will be that global markets had dramatically underestimated the scale of the coming Energy shock.
The Window for Positioning Is Closing
Volatility is already rising. The key question for traders is no longer whether Energy markets will move – but whether positioning occurs before the repricing accelerates.
“When Energy becomes the macro story, the move is already underway,” Hansen concludes. “The biggest gains accrue to those positioned before consensus catches up.”
For traders searching for asymmetric opportunity in 2026, Oil is no longer a peripheral trade. It is rapidly becoming the centrepiece.
Momentum is building, capital is rotating and the message from global Energy markets is becoming increasingly clear: the case for $100 Oil has just intensified.
