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Energy · Daily Brief
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
Signal
The energy world is converging on a single date: April 22, when the U.S.-Iran ceasefire expires and the Strait of Hormuz crisis enters its next phase. Brent crude jumped over 6% to above $96 on Monday after Iran re-closed the Strait over the weekend, and Tehran explicitly warned it will not guarantee safe passage while the U.S. restricts its oil exports. Kuwait has already declared force majeure on crude and refined product shipments — the first Gulf state to formally invoke contractual relief — signaling that disruptions are no longer theoretical but operational. Meanwhile, the crisis is accelerating structural shifts globally: European EV sales surged 51% in March as gasoline prices soared, China's U.S. ethane imports are hitting record highs as Middle East feedstock dries up, Cambodia broke ground on its first gigawatt-scale hydropower project, and Air Canada suspended key routes after jet fuel nearly doubled. Suspicious $1 billion bearish oil bets placed just before the April 7 ceasefire announcement are drawing regulatory scrutiny. The market is no longer functioning on normal supply-demand logic — it is trading on geopolitical headlines, and the next 48 hours will determine whether oil heads toward $200 or retreats toward $80.
Stories
Brent crude surged over 6% on Monday to above $96 per barrel after Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz again over the weekend following a brief Friday opening. Iran's First Vice President Mohammad-Reza Aref stated: 'The security of the Strait of Hormuz is not free. One cannot restrict Iran's oil exports while expecting free security for others.' The U.S. Navy has seized two Iranian vessels in the area. Three vessels — a tanker with no identified owner, a Ghana-flagged ship, and an Iranian-flagged container ship — tested passage and appear to have transited into the Gulf of Oman. The two-week ceasefire announced April 7 expires April 22. Oil trader Gunvor's CEO Gary Pedersen warned the Financial Times that price volatility could persist for months. (OilPrice.com, multiple articles)
Impact · The ceasefire expiration creates a binary outcome for crude markets: either negotiations extend and prices pull back sharply (as happened post-April 7), or hostilities resume and the $200/bbl scenario flagged by analysts comes into play. Physical traders face immediate cargo uncertainty in the Persian Gulf, while downstream players must manage margin volatility with jet fuel already nearly doubled from pre-conflict levels.
Kuwait Petroleum Corporation has notified customers it is invoking force majeure on shipments of crude oil and refined products after disruptions at the Strait of Hormuz prevented some vessels from entering the Persian Gulf. The measure was triggered by the U.S. seizure of an Iranian-flagged cargo vessel in the waterway. Reuters reported the force majeure is not expected to be permanent but signals operational disruption to Gulf shipping routes. (OilPrice.com, citing Reuters)
Impact · Kuwait's force majeure is the first formal declaration by a Gulf producer, establishing legal precedent that could be followed by other Gulf exporters (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iraq via southern ports). Buyers holding term contracts with Kuwait Petroleum now face legitimate supply gaps that must be filled from alternative sources — likely at significant premiums. This also signals to insurers and shippers that Gulf transit risk has crossed from elevated to unacceptable for some carriers.
Traders poured nearly $1 billion into the ProShares UltraShort Bloomberg Crude Oil ETF (SCO) shortly before President Trump announced the April 7 ceasefire, which sent oil prices plunging nearly $20 per barrel. Fresh reports indicate the trades are now under scrutiny for potential insider knowledge or market manipulation. The perfectly timed positioning generated enormous returns as crude collapsed on the ceasefire news. (OilPrice.com)
Impact · If investigations confirm insider trading tied to geopolitical intelligence, it would fundamentally undermine confidence in oil price discovery during the conflict — already strained by what analysts describe as markets 'no longer trading like a market.' Regulatory action could lead to new restrictions on leveraged commodity ETFs or enhanced surveillance of unusual positioning ahead of major geopolitical announcements.
Battery electric vehicle registrations in 15 key EU + EFTA markets surged 51% year-over-year in March to over 224,000 units, capturing 22% of all new passenger car sales, driven by soaring gasoline prices from the Iran conflict (New Automotive / E-Mobility Europe data via OilPrice.com). Separately, Cambodia broke ground on the Upper Tatay pumped storage hydropower project — its first gigawatt-scale power plant — backed by Chinese investment, as the Middle East war strains fuel supply to Southeast Asia. China's ethane imports from the U.S. are set to hit a record 800,000 tons in April as Middle East naphtha and LPG supply collapses (JLC estimates via Bloomberg/OilPrice.com).
Impact · The Iran conflict is compressing energy transition timelines that were expected to play out over years into months. The 51% EV surge suggests a demand destruction feedback loop for gasoline that could persist even if oil prices normalize — consumers who switch to EVs rarely switch back. Meanwhile, China's pivot to U.S. ethane creates new trade flow dependencies and opportunities for U.S. NGL exporters. Cambodia's hydro project signals that the crisis is reshaping energy infrastructure investment across emerging Asia.
UK CPI inflation is expected to rise to 3.3% for March (from 3.0% in February), driven primarily by soaring fuel prices linked to the Iran conflict, according to economists polled by Bloomberg (OilPrice.com). Separately, the UK government announced plans to propose electricity price changes as part of its clean power push, with the Middle East war highlighting Britain's vulnerability to energy price shocks (BBC Business). Air Canada suspended several key U.S. routes (Toronto/Montreal to JFK, Salt Lake City, Jacksonville) starting June 1 after jet fuel nearly doubled. (OilPrice.com)
Impact · Rising inflation driven by energy costs constrains central bank ability to cut rates, creating a stagflationary environment that reduces economic activity and, eventually, energy demand. The UK's proposed electricity reforms signal that governments are using the crisis as political cover for accelerating decarbonization — a pattern likely to repeat across Europe. Airlines cutting routes signals demand destruction in transportation fuels that could soften jet fuel cracks if route suspensions spread.
Pattern
WATCH IN THE NEXT 30-90 DAYS: (1) April 22 ceasefire deadline outcome — this is the single most consequential variable for oil markets; any extension terms and duration will set the price band for weeks. (2) Additional Gulf state force majeure declarations — if Saudi Arabia or UAE follow Kuwait, expect Brent to breach $100 rapidly. (3) Regulatory investigation outcomes on the $1B pre-ceasefire oil trades — SEC/CFTC actions could come within 60 days and may reshape commodity market oversight. (4) European EV sales data for April and May — if the 51% growth rate sustains or accelerates, long-term gasoline demand models need fundamental revision. (5) China's ethane and LNG import sourcing patterns — record U.S. ethane imports may signal a durable trade flow shift independent of tariff negotiations. (6) UK electricity market reform proposals — expect draft legislation within 60 days that could restructure wholesale power pricing. (7) Russia's oil revenue trajectory — with waivers extended and prices elevated, watch for Zelenskyy's criticism to translate into European political pressure for re-tightening sanctions. (8) Southeast Asian energy infrastructure announcements — Cambodia's hydro project may be the first of several crisis-driven renewable commitments in the region.
Sources