Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
24MAY

Aramco CEO: no oil normality until 2027

2 min read
14:49UTC

Aramco chief executive Amin Nasser warned on 12 May that the global oil market will not normalise until 2027 if the Hormuz blockade runs past mid-June. The forecast extends his 11 May 100 million barrel per week supply-loss warning from a fortnightly figure to a multi-year horizon.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Aramco's Nasser warned on 12 May that global oil will not normalise until 2027 if Hormuz stays shut.

Amin Nasser, chief executive of Aramco, warned on 12 May 2026 that the global oil market will not normalise until 2027 if the Hormuz blockade runs past mid-June 1. The forecast extends his 11 May warning about a 100 million barrel per week supply loss from a fortnightly figure to a multi-year horizon. Aramco is the Saudi state oil company and the largest single producer in the world; Nasser is not predicting a kinetic event but forecasting that the absence of a written ceasefire architecture will leave the war-risk insurance freeze in place through 2026.

The mechanism is the price discovery process that would normalise Brent does not exist while the European mission's rules of engagement remain unpublished . Even a signed ceasefire next month would not unwind the premium: although the kinetic risk would lift, war-risk insurance underwriting and shipping repositioning would still take quarters to clear. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley corroborated the same structural read of the P&I (Protection and Indemnity) insurance freeze. The 2027 figure is when the structural premium might lift, not when it might spike further.

Brent's $107.05 close on 13 May sits roughly $40 above the pre-war baseline at around $67. At global consumption of roughly 100 million barrels per day, that is $4 billion per day in transferred wealth from importers to producers, sustained for 75 days already. The 2027 horizon implies a cumulative wealth transfer measured in trillions if it holds. For UK and European households, that is the structural diesel cost increase locked in until at least mid-2027 if the forecast proves accurate.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Saudi Aramco is the world's largest oil company, owned by the Saudi government. Its chief executive Amin Nasser said on 12 May that the global oil market will not get back to normal until 2027, even if the fighting in Iran stops next month. Nasser's 2027 date reflects how the insurance system for tanker shipping works. Specialist insurers will not cover oil tankers going through the Strait of Hormuz until they see written, agreed rules for how the strait will be managed after any ceasefire. Setting up those rules, getting the major nations to agree them, and then rebuilding the shipping routes that were diverted during the war could all take until 2027. Even good news from the Trump-Xi summit in Beijing this week would not immediately bring petrol prices down. The machinery of oil transport takes months to restart once it has been disrupted.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Nasser's 2027 forecast emerges from the structural illiquidity of the specialist shipping insurance market. Lloyd's of London war-risk syndicates and the main P&I clubs, Gard, West of England, UK P&I, and Steamship Mutual, are the only underwriters capable of covering very large crude carriers (VLCCs) in contested waters.

None of them will price Hormuz war-risk cover below a "named peril" premium until they have a published multilateral rules-of-engagement document, because without it they cannot cap their actuarial exposure. A VLCC hull loss in the strait would cost approximately $120-140 million; at current rates and fleet exposure, a single incident could exceed a syndicate's entire annual premium income from Iran-adjacent routes.

Roughly 80 VLCCs that would normally run the Hormuz-Singapore route have been diverted to the Cape of Good Hope, adding 14-21 days to each round trip. Those vessels cannot return until insurance reopens, and their absence keeps tanker day-rates elevated, adding a freight-cost layer on top of the commodity-price layer that Brent captures.

First Reported In

Update #96 · Hegseth: no AUMF needed. Trump flies east

CNBC· 13 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Civilians and prisoners inside Iran
Civilians and prisoners inside Iran
Mojtaba Kian was hanged in under 50 days from arrest, the fastest wartime espionage case in Hengaw's record, as Trump announced a peace deal. Amnesty places Iran's 2026 execution count above 200 at its fastest pace in 44 years; the diplomatic track has not altered the internal enforcement tempo.
China
China
Beijing accepted a Pakistani civilian briefing mission on the same day OFAC's GL V expired, keeping itself inside the deal architecture without being a named signatory. How Chinese banks respond to Monday's Hengli dollar-clearing decision is the first real-world test of whether the verbal MOU carries any institutional weight.
Pakistan
Pakistan
Islamabad split its highest-level delegation: army chief Munir to Tehran on the security track, Prime Minister Sharif and Foreign Minister Dar to Beijing before Monday's GL V-driven bank compliance decision. The architecture routes the deal's hardest problem, IRGC buy-in, through the general-officer channel that has extracted every wartime concession.
Israeli government
Israeli government
An unnamed Israeli official told the Times of Israel that Trump privately told Netanyahu the deal will dismantle Iran's nuclear programme and remove all its uranium, terms incompatible with what Tehran and a Reuters source describe. If Netanyahu believes he was promised full dismantlement and the deal delivers less, Israel holds a sabotage veto before any signature.
Iranian Foreign Ministry
Iranian Foreign Ministry
Spokesman Esmail Baghaei told state agency IRNA that nuclear issues are 'not in the current negotiations text' and the sequencing is: end the war first, then negotiate nuclear over two months. Baghaei's formulation preserves Khamenei's 21 May uranium-stay directive while letting the civilian diplomacy track continue.
Donald Trump / White House
Donald Trump / White House
Trump declared the Iran deal 'largely negotiated' on 23 May via Truth Social and signed nothing; the White House's only paper was a Memorial Day proclamation. The verbal-track method converts maximum political signalling into minimum legal exposure: no congressional notification, no Senate treaty ratification, no instrument for Iran to formally reject.