Decoding The Hormuz Shock

Nataliia Katser-Buchkovska
Mar 25, 2026 | 13:21 IST

Transmission mechanism is broader, harsher. Higher freight, insurance costs, plus rerouting & precautionary buying, will keep energy prices high even when flows improve. It’s worse for gas than for oil. Major countries must create crisis-resilient energy hubs


The Iran war-linked energy crisis is different from previous shocks. Oil and gas markets are not simply rising, they are repricing violently, around disruption risk. On March 20, Brent settled at $112.19 per barrel, its highest since July 2022, after roughly 440mn barrels were removed from global supply, over 22 days. By March 24, after a sharp selloff on hopes of de-escalation, Brent had rebounded to about $101 per barrel, because markets reassessed the risk of prolonged disruption.
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