While the extreme threat of a runaway energy shock has subsided, global markets must adapt to a prolonged phase of elevated energy costs. According to Arvind Sanger, Managing Partner at Geosphere Capital, the probability of Brent crude spiking to catastrophic levels like $150 per barrel has drastically reduced. However, structural supply constraints, severely depleted global inventories, and logistical bottlenecks mean oil is unlikely to return to its previous lower comfort zones, establishing a firm floor between $80 and $90 per barrel for months to come.
The Reality of Supply Normalization
Many market participants expect a swift decline in energy prices the moment geopolitical headlines ease, but the physical reality of oil infrastructure suggests otherwise:
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Months, Not Weeks: Unwinding supply chain disruptions and restoring traditional shipping pathways through the Persian Gulf is an operational bottleneck. Sanger notes that structural normalization will be a slow, multi-month process.
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The Inventory Rebuild Trap: Consuming nations heavily depleted their strategic energy reserves during the height of recent geopolitical frictions. The moment oil flows stabilize, a massive wave of institutional buying will begin simply to restock these inventories—creating a secondary, prolonged wave of demand that will keep crude prices firm.
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Tail-Risk Remain: If the normalisation process faces unexpected political or logistical delays, a brief, tactical spike back toward the $110 per barrel range cannot be entirely ruled out.
Persistent Inflation and the Geopolitical Backdrop
| Theme | Structural Outlook & Market Impact |
| Broadening Commodity Pressures | The energy crunch is no longer isolated to crude. Global price pressures are actively seeping into natural gas, chemical fertilizers, and related downstream commodities. |
| Central Bank Hawkishness | Persistent, stickier inflation driven by this baseline energy floor may force central bankers to maintain highly restrictive monetary policies—or consider additional rate hikes—potentially softening short-term global GDP growth. |
| The Secular AI Counter-Weight | Despite these macro headwinds, secular megatrends are holding ground. Structurally dominant sectors—particularly artificial intelligence infrastructure and data center capital expenditure—remain insulated from energy cost pressures. |
| Delicate US-Iran Negotiations | Diplomatic talks face domestic friction in Washington. With Iran demanding extensive sanctions relief and upfront financial guarantees, crafting an agreement that allows both sides to claim domestic political victories remains highly complex. |
