Hormuz Day 14: Brent Reclaims $100 as Selective Blockade Splinters the Response
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Triple Digits, Again
Brent crude reclaimed $100 on Friday, the second time in a week, and this time the floor looks more permanent. The March 10 crash to $88 on SPR release hopes lasted exactly four trading days. The market priced through the intervention in four sessions.
The arithmetic has not changed. Today, ~10-15 vessels transit daily under Iran’s selective blockade, a fraction that might deliver 200,000-300,000 barrels per day to approved buyers. Against a gross shortfall of 14.3 million barrels per day, with 5.7 million in bypass capacity, 1.2 million from the dark fleet, and 4.4 million in SPR drawdown capacity, the effective deficit remains 4-5 million barrels per day.
No peacetime policy tool has ever closed a 4-5 million barrel per day gap. The IEA was designed for pipeline disruptions and hurricane shutdowns, not the closure of a strait. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, and Barclays have all revised year-end Brent targets above $100. Triple-digit oil is now the baseline. The debate has moved to how far above $100.
The Bilateral Rush
Iran’s selective blockade strategy is working faster than Tehran probably expected. Within 24 hours of the Turkish tanker Bogazici’s transit, India, Pakistan, Malaysia, and China have all accelerated bilateral negotiations for Hormuz access. India’s Ministry of Petroleum is in direct contact with Iranian counterparts through Omani intermediaries. Pakistan, with less than three weeks of fuel reserves remaining, has dispatched a special envoy to Tehran.
Each bilateral deal creates a constituency against multilateral enforcement. India secures passage for its LPG carriers and suddenly has no interest in a French-led naval escort that might provoke Iran. China’s shadow fleet already transits freely and Beijing offers diplomatic cover in exchange for continued oil access. Turkey leverages its NATO membership and Muslim-majority status simultaneously.
The selective blockade is a diplomatic weapon. Oil access buys geopolitical alignment. Iran is building a parallel transit regime that could survive the war.
Two Weeks of War
Two weeks since Operation Epic Fury began, the US has struck more than 7,500 targets inside Iran. Over 22 minelayers have been destroyed. Iran’s surface navy has been effectively eliminated as a fighting force, with 65+ vessels destroyed.
But Iran continues to fight from asymmetric positions. Missile and drone attacks on Gulf states have not abated. All six GCC nations remain under intermittent bombardment. Mine deployment continues to outpace destruction; for every minelayer the US sinks, dozens of mines have already been seeded from fishing dhows and fast boats.
The US casualty count has climbed to ~8 killed in action and 150+ wounded since February 28. Iran’s toll is measured in thousands. HRANA human rights monitors are documenting civilian casualties across dozens of cities.
The Insurance Wall
For commercial shipping, the selective blockade changes nothing. Seven P&I clubs remain withdrawn from war-risk coverage in the Persian Gulf. War-risk premiums sit at 1% of hull value (a million-dollar surcharge per transit for a standard VLCC). Maersk, CMA CGM, and Hapag-Lloyd continue to suspend all Hormuz transits.
Even vessels with Iranian permission face the minefield. A selective blockade does not come with a chart of safe passages. The Bogazici transited successfully, but one mine strike on an Iranian-approved vessel would collapse the entire framework overnight.
VLCC rates at $438,000 per day reflect a market priced for extended Cape of Good Hope rerouting. The tonnage absorbed by the additional 10-14 days on Gulf-to-Europe voyages continues to tighten global tanker supply. Suezmax and Aframax rates are following VLCCs into record territory.
What to Watch
- Brent $105 test. The $100 breach has shifted the technical picture. Next resistance at $105, then the March 9 intraday high of $119.
- India carrier transit. Indian LPG carriers expected to attempt passage within 48-72 hours. Success rate determines whether the selective blockade is viable or performative.
- Pakistan envoy to Tehran. A bilateral deal here is existential for Islamabad. Watch for emergency fuel shipments.
- Mine strike on approved vessel. The event that would collapse the selective blockade overnight. Probability rising with every transit.
- OPEC emergency session. With 3.5M barrels of OPEC spare capacity trapped behind Hormuz, pressure building for extraordinary measures.
- US Congressional pressure. Two weeks of war with no stated end goal is generating bipartisan demands for transparency.
Market Data
| Metric | Day 13 (Mar 13) | Day 14 (Mar 14) | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brent Crude | $103.14 | ~$105 | Consolidating above $100 |
| VLCC Day Rate | $440K+/day | $438K+/day | Record territory sustained |
| Hormuz Status | Selective blockade (new) | Selective blockade (expanding) | Bilateral deals multiplying |
| Gulf Offline | ~6.5-7.0M bbl/day | ~6.8-7.2M bbl/day | Storage constraints binding |
| Vessel Transits/day | ~10-15 | ~10-15 | Marginal; approved buyers only |
| US Targets Struck | 6,500+ | 7,500+ | ~1,000/day sustained |
| Minelayers Destroyed | 19+ | 22+ | Accelerating |
| Net Supply Gap | ~4-5M bbl/day | ~4-5M bbl/day | Unchanged by selective transit |
Sources
- CNBC: Brent crude breaks $100 (Mar 14)
- Reuters: India-Iran transit negotiations via Omani intermediaries
- Al Jazeera: Bilateral transit deals expanding, Pakistan envoy to Tehran
- CENTCOM: Target count update, minelayer destruction
- Lloyd’s List: VLCC rates, insurance withdrawal data
- Bloomberg: Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Barclays oil price revisions
- Dawn: Pakistan fuel reserves, special envoy dispatch
- S&P Global: Gulf production offline, storage capacity data
- Maersk, CMA CGM: Continued Hormuz transit suspension statements