The Odds of $100 Oil Are Rising as Supply Shocks Convulse the Market
Mexico slashes shipments against a backdrop of geopolitical tensions.
Trucks pass crude oil storage tanks outside Midland, Texas. Mexico, the US, Qatar and Iraq cut their combined oil flows by more than 1 million barrels a day in March.
Photographer: Matthew Busch/BloombergWhen oil jumped above $90 a barrel just days ago, military tensions between Israel and Iran were the immediate trigger. But the rally’s foundations went deeper — to global supply shocks that are intensifying fears of a commodity-driven inflation resurgence.
A recent move by Mexico to slash its crude exports is compounding a global squeeze, prompting refiners in the US — the world’s biggest oil producer — to consume more domestic barrels. American sanctions have stranded Russian cargoes at sea, with Venezuelan supply a potential next target. Houthi rebel attacks on tankers in the Red Sea have delayed crude shipments. And despite the turmoil, OPEC and its allies are sticking with their production cuts.