For the first time in four years, WTI premium over Brent appears, as the Hormuz blockade reshapes the global crude oil pricing logic

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Mars Finance reports that on April 14, since the outbreak of the U.S.-Iran conflict on February 28, the global crude oil market has been undergoing a profound reshuffling of power dynamics. On April 2, the near-month WTI crude oil futures price exceeded Brent crude oil for the first time in nearly four years, a rare price inversion that reflects the brutal reality of energy supply chain restructuring under wartime conditions.
The core logic behind the inversion lies in the re-pricing of “physical security.” For a long time, Brent crude oil enjoyed a premium due to its representation of global maritime trade flows, but after the actual closure of the Strait of Hormuz, Brent-related crude oil produced in the Persian Gulf, Oman, and the UAE carries a “risk discount,” with shipping insurance premiums soaring, and some shipments have been completely halted.
In contrast, WTI crude oil reaches Gulf Coast refineries via a mature pipeline network, making the “land route advantage” a key competitive edge in this crisis of punishing maritime exposure. Germini Energy founder Germini pointed out: “The market reacts very quickly—buyers are no longer willing to pay a premium for ‘oil representing the global market,’ but rather for ‘oil they can actually get.’”
From a market structure perspective, an extreme “spot premium” pattern has already formed. Currently, the December WTI futures contract trades at about $77 per barrel, roughly $25 lower than the May contract. Investors are rushing to buy physical oil to cope with current supply disruptions while betting that the conflict may ease in the coming months.
In the physical spot market, some Brent crude oil prices have already broken through $140 per barrel. Stratas Advisors President Pasi warned that as the U.S. announced a naval blockade of Iranian ports, the premium situation will become more complex, and spot Brent prices could test the $160 to $190 range in the coming weeks.
If prices remain high for a long time, it will trigger severe “demand destruction,” forcing consumers to significantly cut usage and potentially trigger a global recession. Analysts suggest that this may be the only leverage left to push the U.S. and Iran back to the negotiating table.

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