Hormuz Day 19: Brent Hits $119 as US Launches Campaign to Reopen the Strait
1,200+ energy professionals receive this brief at 06:00 ET
Brent $119
Brent touched $119 in Wednesday’s Asian session, matching the March 9 intraday crisis high. No policy tool in reserve. The 400M barrel SPR release is underway and priced through.
Three escalations converged. The US announced a dedicated aerial campaign targeting Iranian assets threatening Hormuz, pivoting from degrading Iran’s military broadly to fighting explicitly to reopen the waterway. Netanyahu claimed Israel was “helping open Hormuz.” And 22 nations declared willingness to participate in ensuring safe navigation.
Brent retreated from $119 to close near $109 as the coalition announcement and Netanyahu’s remarks provided marginal relief. But the retreat is fragile. Al Jazeera quoted market strategists calling triple-digit oil “the floor, not the ceiling.” The phrase “$200 per barrel” appeared in mainstream analysis for the first time, not as hyperbole but as a plausible scenario.
The Coalition on Paper
Twenty-two nations, zero operational escorts. The joint statement from France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, the UK, and Japan is the broadest multilateral commitment since the crisis began. France pledged the most: carrier Charles de Gaulle, eight warships, two frigates.
The catch is stated plainly in nearly every communiqué: “after the most intense phase ends” or “conditional on ceasefire.” Zero escorts today, zero tomorrow, zero until someone stops fighting.
Coalition value is political, not military. It signals that the international community will not accept a permanent selective blockade. But Iran’s system is designed to fracture exactly this consensus; countries with bilateral transit deals have little incentive to contribute to a multilateral force.
India has sent destroyers to the Gulf of Oman to escort its own tankers, not as part of the coalition but as an independent national operation. Pakistan’s Operation Muhafiz-ul-Bahr continues with eight warships escorting merchant vessels bilaterally. The multilateral framework and the bilateral reality are diverging.
The Hormuz Campaign
The US aerial campaign to reopen Hormuz represents a strategic shift. For three weeks, the military campaign has been about degrading Iran’s war-making capacity (striking missile sites, drone facilities, naval bases, command nodes, and nuclear-related infrastructure). The Hormuz-specific campaign adds a new objective: clearing the coastal threat environment to enable mine clearance operations.
This means targeting IRGC-Navy fast boat bases along both sides of the Strait, anti-ship cruise missile launchers on the islands of Abu Musa, Greater Tunb, and Lesser Tunb, and surveillance and targeting infrastructure along the Iranian coastline. Operational tempo has increased; US targets struck now exceed 12,000, with Hormuz-specific sorties adding to the broader campaign.
But the aerial campaign cannot clear mines from the air. It can suppress the threat environment to make mine clearance safer. The bottleneck remains the same: three LCS ships with unreliable equipment. Clearing the coastal threat environment is necessary but not sufficient for reopening.
Eighty-plus Iranian ships have been destroyed, including more than 40 minelayers. Iran’s conventional naval capability has been functionally eliminated. Mine threat is guerrilla, not naval: distributed across thousands of small craft on 1,500 miles of coastline.
The $200 Question
Mainstream analysts now model $200/bbl Brent as a plausible scenario.
The math: Gulf production offline approaching 8M bbl/day. Bypass covers 5.7M spare. SPR drawdown covers 1.4M/day. Dark fleet adds 1.2M. Net daily deficit: still 4-5M barrels. Global commercial inventories drawing down at record pace. No spare capacity anywhere in the system; OPEC’s 3.5M spare sits behind Hormuz.
What would take oil to $200? Any of the following:
- Houthi attack on a laden tanker at Bab el-Mandeb (collapses the Saudi bypass)
- Escalation to infrastructure targeting (Kharg Island, Ras Tanura, Abqaiq)
- Total failure of mine clearance operations
- Panic buying by importing nations (SPR-to-SPR competition)
- Extended timeline beyond 30 days (SPR exhaustion concerns)
What to Watch
- Brent $119 retest. Today’s spike sets the technical target. A decisive break above $119 opens uncharted territory toward $130-150.
- Hormuz campaign effectiveness. Whether aerial strikes suppress the coastal threat enough for LCS mine clearance to begin.
- Coalition deployment trigger. What conditions would cause a nation to break the ceasefire requirement and deploy independently.
- Netanyahu’s role. Israeli involvement in Hormuz operations adds an inflammatory dimension for Muslim-majority transit partners.
- Iran response to Hormuz campaign. The dedicated reopening effort may provoke escalation: more mines, more missile attacks, or Houthi activation at Bab el-Mandeb.
- Goldman Sachs forecast. Reports suggest Goldman is preparing a revision to triple-digit oil “for years.” Publication would shift institutional positioning.
Market Data
| Metric | Day 18 (Mar 18) | Day 19 (Mar 19) | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brent Crude | ~$107.10 | ~$119 high / ~$109 close | Matched crisis high; volatile |
| WTI Crude | ~$102.50 | ~$108 | Deep into triple digits |
| VLCC Day Rate | $430K+/day | $428K+/day | Sustained records |
| Gulf Offline | ~7.5M bbl/day | ~7.5-8.0M bbl/day | Approaching 8M |
| Coalition Nations | N/A | 22 willing / 6 committed | All conditional on ceasefire |
| US Targets Struck | 11,000+ | 12,000+ | Hormuz-specific campaign added |
| Ships Destroyed | 78+ | 80+ | 40+ minelayers |
| Analyst Forecast | Triple digits sustained | $200/bbl “not far-fetched” | Paradigm shift in expectations |
Sources
- Al Jazeera: $200/bbl analysis, coalition announcement, Netanyahu statement (Mar 19)
- CNBC: Brent $119 intraday spike, market volatility
- Reuters: French naval commitment details, coalition joint statement
- CENTCOM: Hormuz-specific aerial campaign, target count
- Bloomberg: Goldman Sachs forecast preparation, institutional positioning
- CNN: 22-nation coalition, ceasefire conditionality
- Lloyd’s List: VLCC rates, route uncertainty
- Times of Israel: Netanyahu Hormuz statement
- India Ministry of Defence: Destroyer deployment to Gulf of Oman
- Pakistan Navy: Operation Muhafiz-ul-Bahr update
- S&P Global: Gulf production offline, $200/bbl scenario analysis