“For traders,” Hansen explains, “both scenarios create opportunity. The downside is cushioned by structural underinvestment in energy supply. The upside, however, is explosive if geopolitical risk persists.” In other words, the asymmetry is compelling.
Natural Gas: The Inflation Multiplier
If Oil is the spark, Natural Gas is the accelerant. European benchmark Gas prices recently leapt 25% in a single session, touching eight-month highs. Around 15% of global LNG flows – much of it Qatari – transits the Gulf. Europe, having replaced Russian pipeline gas with seaborne LNG, is acutely exposed.
“Gas markets are structurally tighter than many realize,” says Hansen. “Storage levels are lower year-on-year, speculative shorts are elevated and forced short-covering could amplify any disruption.”
Analysts warn that sustained interference with Gulf LNG could propel European Gas prices toward €80–100 per MWh, doubling current levels and intensifying inflationary pressures across the continent.
Underowned, Underestimated and Underpriced
For much of the past year, capital has crowded into artificial intelligence, mega-cap technology and equity indices. Energies remain modestly valued. Futures positioning reflects complacency. Yet upstream capital expenditure remains below what is required to materially expand supply.
“This is precisely how major Commodity bull cycles begin,” Hansen argues. “Underowned, underestimated and dismissed – until price forces recognition.” Oil and Natural Gas today resemble Gold eighteen months before its historic breakout: quietly building pressure beneath the surface.
The world has endured tariffs, institutional conflict and financial stress without faltering. The decisive variable now is whether Oil stays contained. If it does, growth muddles through. If it does not, inflation resurges and capital rotates decisively into hard assets.
The opportunity for 2026 is not hidden in complexity. It is visible in tanker routes and LNG terminals. It is measured in barrels and cubic metres.
The question is not whether volatility will rise – it already has. The question is whether you are positioned before the repricing accelerates.
As Hansen concludes: “When Energy becomes the macro story, the move is already underway. The biggest gains accrue to those positioned before consensus catches up.”
For traders seeking asymmetric upside in 2026, Oil and Natural Gas are no longer peripheral trades – they are potential centrepieces.
The message is becoming clearer: momentum is building, capital is rotating and 2026 may prove to be the year Energies outperform every other major asset class.
