Analysts are beginning to model extreme scenarios. Deutsche Bank has warned that a prolonged blockade could push crude toward $200 a barrel, while JPMorgan estimates that if the disruption lasts more than three weeks Brent could surge into the $130-$150 range as Gulf storage fills and production is forced to shut down.
A System Already Under Stress
What makes the current moment especially dangerous is that the global financial system was already fragile before the energy shock arrived.
Debt levels remain historically high. Inflation across the United States and Europe has proven stubbornly persistent. Bond yields remain elevated and global liquidity conditions are tightening.
Now the energy shock is beginning to ripple across markets.
Oil typically moves first. Inflation expectations follow. Borrowing costs rise. The pressure then spreads across equities, bonds, real estate and cryptocurrencies simultaneously.
Recent data shows the stress is already appearing in unexpected places. Dubai’s Real Estate Index, for example, has fallen 21% in just eight days, highlighting how quickly financial conditions can tighten when energy costs surge.
“When Oil, Gold and Silver start rising together, the market is not signalling stability,” Hansen explains. “It is signalling that the system is beginning to price something much larger than geopolitics. It is pricing an inflation shock and a loss of confidence in the broader financial architecture.”
Europe Faces Another Energy Crunch
The crisis is also spreading beyond Oil markets. European gas prices have surged 90% in just four trading sessions, reaching their highest levels since 2023. Iranian strikes on Qatar have disrupted Liquefied Natural Gas exports, while energy shipping routes across the region remain under threat.
“It’s a double punch,” one energy analyst noted. “Europe has only just emerged from its previous energy crunch and now it’s facing the next one.”
If energy prices remain elevated, economists warn the consequences for inflation could be severe. Some projections suggest U.S CPI could surge toward 5%, levels last seen in March 2023 when the Federal Reserve was aggressively tightening monetary policy.
The Beginning of a New Oil Supercycle?
For Hansen, the current Oil rally may represent something even bigger than a short-term supply shock.
“This is precisely how major Commodity Supercycles begin,” he says. “Under-owned, underestimated and dismissed – until price forces recognition. Oil today resembles where Gold was eighteen months before its historic breakout.”
The opportunity, he argues, is increasingly visible in tanker routes, storage capacity and global demand data.
Measured in barrels rather than headlines.
If the current disruption evolves into a prolonged energy shock, $150 Oil may not be the ceiling – it may simply be the next milestone.
For traders and investors alike, the message from the Oil market is becoming unmistakably clear.
The repricing has already begun.
And those who position early may be the ones who capture the most powerful move of the decade.
The question now is: are you watching the rally – or are you positioned before the next surge begins?
