Goldman Sachs raised its Q2 2026 Brent Crude price forecast by $10 to $76 per barrel. The current spot price sits at approximately $82–84. The gap between those two numbers contains an assumption: that the Strait of Hormuz, which carries roughly 20% of the world's traded oil, will be at least partially operational before Q2 ends in June.
That assumption collides with what happened overnight. The P&I insurance deadline set by Gard, NorthStandard, and three other clubs passed at midnight Thursday , and no new commercial transit through the Strait was documented. More than 150 vessels sit at anchor in the Gulf of Oman and Arabian Sea. The US Navy has told industry leaders it lacks the assets for a regular convoy programme . Trump's government-backed DFC insurance scheme remains non-operational. P&I clubs require weeks of risk reassessment before reinstating war zone coverage even after hostilities end. The commercial infrastructure of maritime shipping — insurance, classification, port state clearance — has its own timeline, and it moves slower than diplomacy.
Goldman's forecast implies one of two outcomes: either a Ceasefire and partial Hormuz restoration within roughly twelve weeks, or a sustained spot price above $76 that forces an upward revision. VLCC daily freight rates have already hit $423,736 — an all-time record exceeding the 1991 Gulf War peak . OPEC+ added 220,000 barrels per day in response to the disruption , a marginal increase against the volume that normally transits the Strait. Hormuz traffic has fallen 80% below normal and the insurance deadline has now pushed it to zero for commercial purposes. The forward curve is pricing in resolution. The physical supply chain is pricing in protracted disruption. One of them is wrong.
