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Special Report On Oil Crisis – 16/3/26

Day 16: Mines in the Strait — The War the Market Can’t Price | Elven Financial
Elven Financial — Energy Intelligence — Day 16 Update — March 16, 2026
🔴 LIVE
BRENT CRUDE $104.37 — 52-wk high $119.50 WTI $100.75 — range $92–$99 today HORMUZ MINES LAID — US sinks 16 Iranian minelayers NEW SUPREME LEADER Mojtaba Khamenei: “Strait MUST stay closed” IEA SPR 400M barrel release — oil ROSE 17% after announcement KHARG ISLAND US strikes military targets — oil infrastructure spared “for now” SHIPPING ATTACKS 16 UKMTO-confirmed attacks since Day 1 IRAN EXCEPTION India LPG tankers allowed through — partial diplomatic signal RUSSIA OIL US Treasury 30-day waiver — Russian crude allowed to flow US GAS PRICES +58¢/gallon since war began — headed to $4/gal TRUMP “Oil surge is a small price to pay for defeating Iran” IRAN FM “We never asked for ceasefire. Ready to defend as long as it takes.” BRENT CRUDE $104.37 — 52-wk high $119.50 WTI $100.75 — range $92–$99 today HORMUZ MINES LAID — US sinks 16 Iranian minelayers NEW SUPREME LEADER Mojtaba Khamenei: “Strait MUST stay closed” IEA SPR 400M barrel release — oil ROSE 17% after announcement KHARG ISLAND US strikes military targets — oil infrastructure spared “for now” SHIPPING ATTACKS 16 UKMTO-confirmed attacks since Day 1 IRAN EXCEPTION India LPG tankers allowed through — partial diplomatic signal RUSSIA OIL US Treasury 30-day waiver — Russian crude allowed to flow US GAS PRICES +58¢/gallon since war began — headed to $4/gal
⚡ Day 16 Update — March 16, 2026

Mines in the Strait:
The War the
Market Can’t Price

Iran is laying mines in the Strait of Hormuz. A new Supreme Leader has vowed to keep it closed. The largest emergency oil release in history — 400 million barrels — failed to push prices down. Brent is holding above $100 for the first time since 2022. The game has changed again.
📊 What Changed Since Our March 9 Report — In 7 Days
$108.75 intraday (Mar 9)
$104.37
Volatility: range $90–$119 over 7 days
$107.82 (Mar 9)
$100.75
Weekly range $87–$119. Extreme volatility.
Effectively closed (insurance/threat)
MINED
Iran lays mines. US sinks 16 minelayers. New dimension.
Power vacuum post-Khamenei
New SL: Mojtaba
Vows Hormuz stays closed. First official policy statement.
None
400M bbl IEA
Largest in IEA history. Oil rose 17% after announcement.
~$3.50
+58¢ total
Analysts: headed to $4/gal by month-end at $90 oil.

Nine days after our last report, the crisis has entered a new phase that no market model has ever priced: Iran is laying naval mines in the Strait of Hormuz. Not threatening mines. Laying them. The US has sunk 16 Iranian minelayers but Iran reportedly has 6,000 mines in inventory. A new Supreme Leader, Mojtaba Khamenei — son of the man killed to start this war — has made his first statement: the Strait must stay closed. The largest emergency oil release in history prompted oil to rise, not fall. And Iran’s foreign minister told CBS on Sunday: “We never asked for a ceasefire. We are ready to defend as long as it takes.”

01 — MARKET SNAPSHOT

Prices: Day 16, March 16, 2026

Brent Crude
$104.37
Range this week: $90–$119.50
Above $100 for 5th consecutive session. 52-week high: $119.50.
WTI Crude
$100.75
Today’s range: $92.04–$99.32
+54% from pre-war ($65.70). Extreme intraday volatility persists.
Brent vs Pre-War
+$34
+49% from $70 (Feb 27)
Settled above $100 for first time since Aug 2022.
EU Gas (TTF)
Elevated
Qatar LNG still offline
20% of global LNG still halted. IEA release covers oil not gas.
US Gas Price
+58¢
Since war began Feb 28
Analysts see $4/gal by month-end if oil stays $90+.
IEA Release Impact
+17%
Oil ROSE after 400M bbl announcement
“A water pistol, not a bazooka” — Ben Emons, FedWatch Advisors.
Ships Attacked
16+
Confirmed UKMTO reports (to Mar 12)
3 more vessels struck Mar 11 alone. Multiple tankers now on fire.
War Cost (US, Day 6)
$11.3B+
Pentagon briefing to Senate (to Day 6 only)
Does not include munitions replacement cost. Senators expect “significantly above” this figure by now.
02 — THE MINE ESCALATION

Iran Lays Naval Mines — The Crisis Enters a New Dimension

⚠ Critical Escalation — First Confirmed Since 1980s Tanker War
Iran is mining the Strait of Hormuz. The US has sunk 16 Iranian minelayers. Iran has 6,000 mines in inventory.

CNN confirmed on March 11 that Iran has begun laying naval mines in the Strait of Hormuz, citing two US intelligence sources. The mining was described as “not yet extensive” as of that date. The US military has since sunk 16 Iranian minelayer vessels attempting to seed the waterway.

The strategic significance of this shift cannot be overstated. A threat to shipping is reversible on a ceasefire. Mines are not. Mine-clearance operations in a 34km-wide active war zone, against a country with 6,000 mines in inventory, is measured in months — not days or weeks. The late 1980s “tanker war” left mines throughout the Gulf that took years to fully clear even with dedicated international minesweeping operations in peacetime.

6,000 mines Iran’s estimated stockpile 16 minelayers sunk by US Months to clear even after ceasefire 1988 precedent: took years

Ben Emons (FedWatch Advisors) wrote in a client note: “Iran’s success in laying mines in the Strait has taken the crisis into a new dimension. With a material military campaign shift, Iran’s chokehold on the Strait will intensify. That is why the oil market views the IEA’s 400 million-barrel release as a water pistol, not a bazooka.”

The mine development reframes the entire duration calculus. Every previous scenario model — including ours — assumed that a ceasefire would relatively quickly allow insurance reinstatement and tanker resumption. That assumption is now incorrect. Even if hostilities ended tomorrow, commercial tankers would not resume Hormuz transits until international minesweeping operations verified safe passage. Given the active conflict environment and Iran’s stated intention to keep the strait closed, that process has not even begun.

Trump warned on Truth Social that if Iran did not remove any mines, “the Military consequences to Iran will be at a level never seen before.” Iran has not responded to this threat by removing mines.

03 — NEW LEADERSHIP

Mojtaba Khamenei: Son of the Man Killed to Start This War

Iran’s new Supreme Leader has broken his silence. Mojtaba Khamenei — the son of Ali Khamenei, whose killing by US-Israeli strikes on February 28 triggered this entire crisis — issued his first public statement via state television on March 13. The message was read by a news anchor, suggesting he may be injured. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth described him as “wounded and likely disfigured.”

The content of his statement was unambiguous: the Strait of Hormuz must remain closed as a “lever to pressure the enemy.” He vowed Iran would continue attacks on Gulf neighbors. On Sunday March 15, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told CBS’s Face the Nation: “We never asked for a ceasefire, and we have never asked even for negotiation. We are ready to defend ourselves as long as it takes.” He denied that Iran was in a war of survival, calling the country “stable and strong enough.”

⚠ The Leadership Continuity Problem The killing of Ali Khamenei was intended to decapitate Iranian decision-making. Instead, it installed his son — who has the same family ideology, the same institutional backing, and a personal motivation to avenge his father — as Supreme Leader. The new leadership may be less pragmatic and more emotionally committed to the closure than the previous regime. Iran’s Supreme National Security Council head Ali Larijani posted on X in English: “Trump says he is looking for a speedy victory. While starting a war is easy, it cannot be won with a few tweets. We will not relent until making you sorry for this grave miscalculation. #TrumpMustPay.”
04 — EVENTS LOG

What Happened: Days 10–16 (March 10–16)

Mar 10
Oil Pullback on Trump Signals Oil prices pulled back sharply for two consecutive days after Trump signaled willingness to discuss de-escalation. Brent briefly fell back toward $90. Markets interpreted comments as diplomatic opening. Iran did not respond.
Mar 11
IEA Announces Historic 400M Barrel Release — Oil Rises The International Energy Agency unanimously agreed to release 400 million barrels from member emergency reserves — the largest in IEA’s 50-year history. The US pledged 172 million barrels from the SPR over 120 days. Fatih Birol: “The most important thing for a return to stable flows is the resumption of transit through the Strait of Hormuz.” Three more vessels struck by projectiles off Iran’s coast the same morning. Oil rose despite the announcement. Iran launches its “most intense operation since the beginning of the war” — advanced ballistic missiles toward Tel Aviv and Haifa.
Mar 11
US Energy Secretary False Claim Causes Flash Crash Energy Secretary Chris Wright’s social media account wrongly stated that the US Navy had escorted a tanker through the Strait of Hormuz. Oil prices fell dramatically. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt corrected the record: “The Navy has not escorted a tanker or a vessel at this time.” Oil rebounded immediately.
Mar 11
Iran Grants India LPG Tanker Exception Iran’s Ambassador to India confirmed that Iran has allowed some Indian LPG vessels safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz — a rare exception to the blockade. The number of vessels was not confirmed. This is the first confirmed diplomatic carve-out and signals Iran is willing to use Hormuz access as a selective geopolitical tool.
Mar 12
Mine Confirmation — CNN Intelligence Report CNN confirms, citing two US intelligence sources, that Iran has begun laying naval mines in the Strait of Hormuz. US forces sink 16 Iranian minelayer vessels. Iran believed to have approximately 6,000 naval mines in stockpile per Congressional Research Service data.
Mar 12
Safesea Vishnu (US Tanker) Struck — More Vessels Hit IRGC attacks Marshall Islands-flagged Safesea Vishnu in Persian Gulf (15 of 16 crew evacuated). Two more tankers hit near Iraq’s coast. Total UKMTO-confirmed attacks now 16 since hostilities began.
Mar 13
New Supreme Leader Issues First Statement Mojtaba Khamenei, in his first public statement, declares Hormuz must remain closed as a “lever to pressure the enemy” and vows to continue attacks. US strikes Kharg Island military targets for the first time — Trump says he deliberately spared oil infrastructure “for reasons of decency” but warns it could be reconsidered. Iran warns: “If oil infrastructure on Kharg is hit, all oil and gas infrastructure in the region where US and allies have interests will be set on fire.”
Mar 13
US Refueling Plane Crashes in Iraq — All 6 Crew Dead A US Air Force refueling aircraft crashes in Iraq, killing all six crew members. Pentagon says preliminary reports indicate mechanical failure, not hostile fire. 7th US military fatality of the war separately confirmed from Iranian attack on Saudi Arabia.
Mar 13
US Treasury Sanctions Waiver on Russian Oil Treasury Secretary Bessent announces a “temporary authorization” allowing countries to purchase Russian oil currently stranded at sea. Russia had previously told Trump it has not shared intelligence with Iran during the war. The waiver is designed to ease global supply pressure — drawing criticism from Ukraine and European allies.
Mar 14
F1 Bahrain and Saudi Grand Prix Cancelled Formula 1 cancels April races in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia due to safety concerns. The “Finalissima” match between Spain and Argentina in Qatar also cancelled. Dubai airport briefly closed after drone attacks in the vicinity, injuring four people. Kuwait International Airport struck by drones — material damage only.
Mar 15
Trump Weighs Kharg Island Oil Infrastructure Strike UN Ambassador Mike Waltz confirms Trump is weighing strikes on Kharg Island oil infrastructure — which handles ~90% of Iran’s crude exports. “The president’s not going to take any options off the table,” Waltz says. Trump calls for countries to send warships to protect Hormuz — no commitments received. Iran FM Araghchi: “We never asked for ceasefire. Ready to defend as long as it takes.”
Mar 16
Day 16 — Markets Open, War Continues Brent $104.37, WTI $100.75. Asian markets wary. Hormuz remains mined and closed. Iran’s new Supreme Leader’s position is clear. IEA release providing marginal support only. IMO convening extraordinary session on Hormuz. Israel-Lebanon ceasefire talks reportedly beginning through French mediation — no impact yet on Hormuz.
05 — THE IEA RESPONSE

400 Million Barrels: The Largest Emergency Release in History — And It Failed

Fig. 1 — Price Path: Feb 27 → March 16, 2026
Brent Crude ($/bbl) — Full 16-Day Escalation with Key Events
Sources: Investing.com, Fortune, CNBC, Reuters. IEA announcement Mar 11 — Brent rose from ~$90 to close at $91.98 (+4.76%) that session. Mine confirmation Mar 12 added further support.

The IEA’s 400 million barrel release is, on paper, an extraordinary intervention — the largest coordinated emergency oil release in the organization’s 50-year history, nearly 2.2 times the 182 million barrels released in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. And it failed to push oil prices down by a single dollar.

The reason is mathematical and structural. The Strait of Hormuz blockade is removing approximately 15–20 million barrels per day from global markets. The 400 million barrel release, spread over 120 days (the US release timeline), amounts to roughly 1.4 million barrels per day from the US alone — about 15% of the daily supply loss. Combined IEA contributions may add another 1–2 million bpd, covering at most 20–25% of the gap. And critically: oil from strategic reserves cannot move instantaneously. SPR oil takes 13 days minimum to reach markets after a presidential release order. Physical constraints in pipeline and port infrastructure cap the actual throughput far below the theoretical maximum.

Rapidan Energy Group described this as “the biggest oil supply disruption in history — by a factor of two.” CFR’s Jason Bordoff noted that the 2011 SPR release — which was triggered by the Libyan crisis that removed 1.5 million bpd — looks “almost quaint today.” We are dealing with 15–20 million bpd at risk, not 1.5 million.

The SPR Math Problem IEA members collectively hold ~1.25 billion barrels in government emergency reserves + ~600 million in obligated industry stocks. At 400 million barrels released over 120 days: ~3.3M bpd maximum throughput (theoretical). Against 15–20M bpd blocked by Hormuz: the release covers 17–22% of the gap. “There is simply no substitute for restoring access through the Strait of Hormuz.” — Angie Gildea, KPMG Global Oil & Gas Leader.
Fig. 2 — Supply Gap vs. Emergency Response (M bpd)
What’s Blocked vs. What the IEA Can Release Daily
Sources: IEA, EIA, Raymond James, Rystad Energy, CFR. IEA release throughput is estimated maximum; actual delivery likely lower due to infrastructure constraints.
06 — KHARG ISLAND

The Sword of Damocles: Trump Weighs Striking Iran’s Oil Heart

Kharg Island is the most consequential single oil facility on Earth right now. It accounts for approximately 90% of Iran’s crude oil exports, with a loading capacity of roughly 7 million barrels per day. On March 13, the US struck Kharg Island military targets for the first time. Trump explicitly said he chose “NOT to wipe out the Oil Infrastructure on the Island” — but warned that restraint could be reconsidered.

UN Ambassador Waltz confirmed on March 15 that striking Kharg Island oil infrastructure is now “on the table.” Iran’s response was immediate and unambiguous: state media reported that any attack on Iranian oil infrastructure would trigger attacks on “all oil and gas infrastructure in the region in which the US and its allies have interests.” That threat covers Ras Tanura, Ghawar, Burgan, Ruwais, and every major Gulf energy facility still operating.

The strategic calculus is brutally constrained. Striking Kharg Island removes Iran’s primary revenue source and potentially accelerates regime collapse — the political objective. But Iran has already demonstrated its willingness and ability to hit Gulf energy infrastructure. A Kharg Island oil strike could trigger a retaliatory cascade that removes Saudi and UAE upstream production from the market — at which point the total supply disruption becomes almost impossible to model.

⚠ Kharg Island Scenario — What It Means for Oil If the US strikes Kharg Island oil infrastructure AND Iran retaliates against Ghawar or Abqaiq: total supply removed could reach 20–25M bpd — exceeding normal Hormuz flow entirely. No historical precedent exists for this scenario. $200/bbl would not be an unreasonable short-term ceiling. The IMF has estimated that a sustained $10/bbl oil price increase reduces global GDP by 0.3–0.5%. A $130/bbl sustained scenario implies GDP impact measured in multiple percentage points — a global recession, not a slowdown.
07 — ASSET STATUS

Infrastructure Register — Updated March 16

Asset Country Capacity Status Latest (Mar 16)
Strait of Hormuz Iran / Oman 20M bpd (~20% global oil) MINED + CLOSED Mines confirmed Mar 12. US sinks 16 minelayers. New Supreme Leader: “must remain closed.” Mine clearance: months even post-ceasefire.
Qatar LNG — Ras Laffan 🇶🇦 Qatar 81M mt/yr (20% global LNG) FORCE MAJEURE Still offline. All downstream (urea, methanol, polymers, aluminium) halted. Minimum 1-month restart timeline from day of reopening.
Kuwait Petroleum Corp (KPC) 🇰🇼 Kuwait 2.6M bpd crude FORCE MAJEURE Still force majeure. Kuwait airport struck by drones Mar 14 (material damage). 100% Hormuz dependent.
Iraq Southern Fields 🇮🇶 Iraq From 4.3M → 1.3M bpd −70% COLLAPSED Remains at ~1.3M bpd. Two more tankers struck near Basra/Khor al-Zubair Mar 12. Storage remains full.
NEWKharg Island
Iran’s primary export terminal
🇮🇷 Iran ~7M bpd loading capacity MILITARY STRUCK US struck military targets Mar 13 — oil infrastructure deliberately spared. Trump warned restraint is conditional. Iran: any oil infrastructure strike triggers regional retaliation. Trump admin weighing full strike.
NEWSafesea Vishnu (tanker) Marshall Islands flag STRICKEN IRGC drone strike Mar 11/12. 15 of 16 crew evacuated. US-owned vessel.
NEWOman Salalah — Fuel Silos 🇴🇲 Oman BURNING Drones struck fuel tanks at Salalah port. Silos reported on fire Mar 12. Authorities working to contain blaze.
NEWDubai Airport vicinity 🇦🇪 UAE World’s busiest international airport HIT NEARBY Two drones fell near DXB Mar 11, 4 injured. Airport briefly closed. Flights partially resumed. Amazon Web Services data centres in UAE also struck — “major structural damage” to 2 of 3.
NEWKuwait Airport 🇰🇼 Kuwait DRONE STRIKE Struck by drones Mar 14. Material damage only. Operations continuing.
Ras Tanura Refinery
Saudi Aramco
🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia 550,000 bpd OFFLINE Still offline. Shaybah oilfield (1M bpd) remained under drone threat — Saudi air defences active. Berri field (250K bpd) still at risk.
ADNOC Offshore 🇦🇪 UAE 3.5M bpd total CUTTING Managing production to storage limits. 1.5M bpd Fujairah bypass providing partial relief.
EXCEPTIONIndia LPG Tankers Hormuz (Iran exception) Limited LPG cargoes EXCEPTION GRANTED Iran’s Ambassador confirmed some Indian LPG vessels allowed safe passage. Number unconfirmed. First bilateral carve-out — signals Iran may use Hormuz access selectively as diplomacy tool.
08 — COUNTRY IMPACTS

Who’s Hurting: The Global Economic Damage at Week 2+

🇮🇳
India

Emergency Pivoting — With One Exception

25-day crude stock buffer
India is in full energy emergency mode: ramping Russian crude imports under the 30-day US Treasury waiver, cutting industrial gas supply, ordering refineries to prioritize LPG cooking gas. India has also secured a rare Hormuz passage exception for LPG tankers from Iran’s ambassador — a diplomatic signal that New Delhi is hedging its relationships carefully. SBI Research: sustained $120–130 oil shrinks GDP growth from 7% to ~6%. India’s restaurants are facing an LPG shortage as global LPG supply chains buckle. The Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline — long stalled — is once again being discussed as an emergency supply option.
🇵🇰
Pakistan

Inflation Deepening

PKR 321/litre, up 20%
Pakistan raised fuel prices 20% on March 7 and pressure for a second hike is growing as oil stays above $100. Pakistan formally requested Saudi Arabia reroute oil via Yanbu (Red Sea) — Saudi Arabia has arranged at least one such shipment. Bangladesh and Sri Lanka are flagged as facing acute LNG shortages with Qatar offline. Economists warn transport, food, and electricity costs will cascade through the economy through Q2 if the conflict persists another 2–4 weeks.
🇨🇳
China

Better Positioned, Not Immune

Refinery run cuts underway
Goldman Sachs notes China can withstand oil’s surge past $100 better than most — it has larger forex reserves, more domestic production capacity, and existing discounted Russian crude relationships. China is reportedly in dialogue with Iran to secure passage for Chinese-flagged crude and LNG vessels — a logical leverage point given China purchases 90% of Iran’s oil exports. Chinese refiners have cut crude unit runs or advanced planned maintenance. China’s LNG inventory buffer (7.6M tonnes as of end-Feb) provides weeks of coverage. Africa is being targeted for new crude sourcing.
🇯🇵
Japan

Strategic Reserve Deployment

70% of crude via Hormuz
Japanese refiners formally requested government stockpile releases after Day 8. The government has begun evaluation. Japan’s refiners source 95% of crude from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, and Qatar — approximately 70% of that transiting Hormuz. Japan is an IEA member and will receive a portion of the 400M barrel release allocation. The yen has weakened as oil-driven import costs mount. Japan’s government has reportedly opened emergency contact with Qatar about LNG restart timelines.
🇺🇸
United States

Politically Strained

+58¢/gal since war; $11B+ war cost
Trump told reporters the oil price surge is “a small price to pay for defeating Iran.” US consumers have seen gas prices rise 58 cents a gallon since the war began — analysts project $4/gallon by month-end at sustained $90+ oil. The Pentagon briefed senators the first six days cost $11.3B — senators expect the real figure is “significantly above” that. US GDP grew just 0.7% last quarter ahead of the war. Stagflation risk is now mainstream: elevated energy-driven inflation simultaneously with slowing growth. The Fed is expected to delay rate cuts through at least Q2.
🇪🇺
Europe

Gas + Oil Double Shock

TTF gas remains elevated
Europe faces a dual shock: oil above $100 and Qatar LNG offline (supplying ~20% of EU LNG imports). Both the IEA release and US Russian oil sanctions waiver help at the margin. France is now mediating Israel-Lebanon ceasefire discussions — a sign of European diplomatic engagement but no impact on Hormuz. African officials have warned the sharp oil price rise is devastating Sub-Saharan economies. European refiners are scrambling for West African and US crude alternatives. Jet fuel premiums over crude are spiking separately as refinery logistics fracture.
🇷🇺
Russia

Unexpected Beneficiary

Stranded crude now flowing
Russia has emerged as a quiet winner: the US Treasury 30-day sanctions waiver allows countries to purchase Russian crude currently stranded at sea. Russia told Trump it has not shared intelligence with Iran during the war — a message designed to keep that waiver in place. Russian crude, already discounted vs Brent, is now being actively sought by India, China, and European buyers as Gulf supply crumbles. At $100+ Brent, even heavily sanctioned Russian crude commands premium prices. Russia’s fiscal position improves materially at every $10/bbl increase.
🌍
Emerging Markets

Cascading Fiscal Crises

$10/bbl = 10–20bps GDP loss
African officials warned at a March 13 conference that the oil price surge is devastating. Bangladesh and Sri Lanka face acute LNG shortages with Qatar offline. Egypt’s gas imports from Israeli Karish and Leviathan fields remain cut. Governments that subsidize fuel face expanding fiscal deficits; those that pass prices through face social unrest. Sri Lanka was already offloading crew members from Iranian vessels stranded off its coast. Indonesia is pivoting to US crude imports. The IMO will convene an extraordinary session on Hormuz shipping threats — the first such gathering in the organization’s history.
09 — REPRICED SCENARIOS

The Scenarios at Day 16: Mines Change Everything

The mine development requires a fundamental restructuring of scenario timelines. Our March 9 report adjusted probabilities upward from March 6. The mine confirmation requires another adjustment — specifically, it extends the minimum resolution timeline for all scenarios and raises the floor price in the “best case” substantially. Even a ceasefire signed tomorrow would not reopen Hormuz quickly.

The EIA’s March 10 STEO forecast — prepared before mine confirmation — projected Brent above $95/bbl for two months before falling below $80 in Q3. That forecast assumed gradual Hormuz reopening. With mines in the water and a new Supreme Leader committed to keeping the strait closed, that Q3 recovery path is now highly optimistic.

Scenario A — Best Case

Ceasefire + Mine Clearance

$80–$95
Probability: ~10% (was 15% on Mar 9)
  • Ceasefire within 1–2 weeks
  • Iran agrees to halt mine-laying; international minesweeping begins
  • Hormuz partially clear in 4–6 weeks post-ceasefire
  • IEA release bridges gap during clearance
  • Qatar LNG restart adds 4–6 weeks to any gas recovery
  • Floor raised from March 9: mines mean sub-$80 is unlikely for months even in best case
  • Price path: sharp ceasefire drop to $85, then slow grind down as shipping resumes
Scenario B — Base Case

Prolonged War, Mines Persist

$100–$130
Probability: ~55% (was 50%)
  • Conflict continues 4–8 more weeks
  • Iran expands mine-laying; US sinks minelayers but can’t prevent seeding
  • Hormuz effectively closed for 2–3 months total
  • Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar remain force majeure throughout
  • IEA release covers ~20% of gap; rest absorbed by demand destruction and alternatives
  • Russia becomes primary swing supplier for Asia
  • $4/gal US pump price by April; $5/gal if $120+ oil
  • Global GDP impact: 50–100 bps drag; mild recession in energy-import EMs
Scenario C — Worst Case

Kharg Strike + Full Gulf Cascade

$150–$200+
Probability: ~35% (unchanged)
  • US strikes Kharg Island oil infrastructure
  • Iran retaliates: Ghawar, Abqaiq, or Ruwais struck
  • Saudi Arabia declares force majeure — total Gulf FM cascade
  • Total supply removed: 20–25M bpd — exceeds normal Hormuz flow
  • Mine-clearance operations take 6–12 months
  • Global recession: 2–3% GDP contraction scenarios now in analyst discussions
  • EM sovereign defaults; Europe emergency energy rationing
  • $150+ sustained — Qatar FM minister’s warning materializes
Fig. 3 — Repriced Scenarios: March 16 Forward
Brent Crude Price Path — Updated for Mine Development ($/bbl)
All scenario floors raised vs. March 9 analysis. Mine-clearance timeline means even ceasefire does not produce rapid price recovery. EIA STEO (Mar 10) pre-mine forecast shown for comparison.
10 — WATCH LIST

The 5 Variables That Decide the Next Week

1. Kharg Island oil infrastructure decision. This is the single binary event that could either end the conflict quickly or trigger a catastrophic escalation cascade. Trump has publicly left this option open. Iran has explicitly promised region-wide retaliation against US-allied energy infrastructure if Kharg oil facilities are struck. Every other variable depends on how this decision plays out.

2. Mine-laying pace vs. US counter-mining. The US has sunk 16 Iranian minelayers. Iran has reportedly laid fewer than 10 mines to date (Congressional Research Service, March 9 data). With 6,000 mines in stockpile, Iran can sustain this campaign indefinitely. The question is whether US naval operations can keep mine-laying suppressed — and if so, at what cost in naval resources and escalation risk.

3. Whether China’s mediation produces a carve-out. China is reportedly in dialogue with Iran to allow Chinese-flagged crude and LNG vessels safe passage. If successful, this creates a precedent — selective Hormuz access as a diplomatic instrument. It would ease Chinese supply pressure without ending the blockade. Watch for Chinese tanker movements through the strait as a leading indicator.

4. Lebanon ceasefire track. French President Macron is mediating Israel-Lebanon talks. A Lebanon ceasefire would not directly reopen Hormuz, but it would reduce the total front count and potentially create diplomatic space for a broader de-escalation. Watch whether Ron Dermer (Israel’s lead negotiator) and Lebanon’s delegation actually meet.

5. Saudi Arabia upstream status. Shaybah (1M bpd) and Berri (250K bpd) remain under drone threat. Saudi Arabia has so far kept upstream production running by diverting exports via Yanbu. If Iran lands a successful strike on Shaybah or — critically — on Abqaiq or Ghawar, Brent breaks $130 before trading closes that session. Watch Saudi Aramco operational statements daily.

“The oil market views the IEA’s 400 million-barrel release as a water pistol, not a bazooka. Iran’s success in laying mines in the Strait has taken the crisis into a new dimension.”
— Ben Emons, Chief Investment Officer, FedWatch Advisors — March 12, 2026
BOTTOM LINE — DAY 16

Three weeks into Operation Epic Fury, the global oil market has priced in a prolonged crisis but has not yet priced in its worst-case resolution. Brent above $100 is no longer a surprise — it is the new floor. The mine development means that floor will hold for months even in optimistic scenarios, because physical clearance of the strait cannot happen quickly regardless of diplomatic outcomes.

The fundamental asymmetry of this crisis has not changed: Iran can keep the strait closed at relatively low marginal cost (mines, drones, IRGC naval harassment). The US and allies pay an enormous cost every day in military operations, economic disruption, and geopolitical credibility to try to reopen it. The new Supreme Leader has staked his first public statement on keeping it closed. Iran’s foreign minister has publicly rejected ceasefire talks.

The one genuinely new variable since our March 9 report is the selective India LPG exception — evidence that Iran is prepared to use Hormuz access as selective diplomatic currency rather than a purely binary tool. That is the first hint of negotiating flexibility from Tehran. Whether it expands into something larger — and whether the Trump administration can find a diplomatic channel to test it — may be the most consequential question of the next seven days.

Until that channel opens, oil markets are priced for a war, not a resolution.

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