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Iran Conflict 2026
19APR

Brent at $111, IEA at $106: the $5 gap

3 min read
11:05UTC

Brent crude settled at $111.22 on 19 May while the IEA's May Oil Market Report projects $106; Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley identified two stacked premium layers.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Brent's $5 spread above the IEA model is the price of unwritten governance from every Hormuz party.

Brent settled at $111.22 per barrel on 19 May 2026, down 0.79 per cent from the $112.10 conflict high on 18 May , yet the IEA (International Energy Agency) May Oil Market Report projects Brent at roughly $106 per barrel for May-June, with global supply shut-ins peaking at 10.8 million barrels per day this month and observed inventories drawing 129 million barrels in March and 117 million in April 1. The spread runs at roughly $5 per barrel above the IEA model and is widening, not contracting.

Saudi Aramco and ADNOC output data feeds the IEA base case, yet current production cannot explain a premium of this size. What the market is pricing is institutional uncertainty: the PGSA permit regime with no public price, the Hormuz coalition with no published rules of engagement, the WPR clock with no presidential text, and the UNSC Barakah session producing a record but no resolution. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley identified the two-layer premium two weeks earlier, separating a volatile kinetic component from a sticky structural insurance one. The $5 per barrel is the daily settlement of that structural flag.

Brent had reached $109.30 per barrel on 16 May before the Barakah strike and Trump's strike stand-down post drove the trajectory upward then back. The contour traces a market reading every institutional signal in real time, yet no paper has issued from the institution that could anchor a settlement.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Brent crude settled at $111 per barrel on 19 May. The IEA, the international body that tracks oil markets, calculates the price should be around $106 given current supply levels. The $5 gap is not explained by how much oil is actually being produced or consumed. The extra $5 is not because there is less oil available than expected. It is because no one has published the rules governing who can ship oil through the Strait of Hormuz, at what cost, and under what legal framework. When markets cannot price risk, they add a buffer. That buffer is $5 per barrel and it flows through to petrol prices, food transport costs, and energy bills.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The IEA's $106 May-June projection models supply and demand but does not model war-risk insurance costs, which are a frictional charge that sits between supply and the market's effective price. Lloyd's suspension of Hormuz war-risk cover is not a supply disruption in the engineering sense but it raises the effective cost of moving supply to market, which shows up as a price premium disconnected from barrels-per-day arithmetic.

Four sources of unwritten governance compound the premium simultaneously: the PGSA tariff vacuum, the 26-nation coalition without published rules of engagement, the WPR clock without a presidential instrument, and the UNSC Barakah session that produced a record but no resolution. Goldman and Morgan Stanley's two-layer model captures the first two; the latter two are additional structural flags priced simultaneously.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Aramco CEO Amin Nasser's 12 May warning that markets will not normalise until 2027 even if Hormuz reopens in June reflects the 6-12 month lag in war-risk cover reinstatement and fleet repositioning; the premium has a floor even post-ceasefire.

    Medium term · 0.78
  • Risk

    IEA May OMR projects global inventories will remain in deficit through Q4 2026 even if Hormuz flows resume in June. If resumption is delayed past August, the inventory draw since March (246 million barrels cumulative) begins producing physical shortage rather than premium pricing.

    Medium term · 0.72
  • Opportunity

    A PGSA published tariff, even an informal one, would satisfy Lloyd's stated threshold for reconsidering war-risk cover; that single document could compress part of the structural premium within weeks of publication.

    Short term · 0.6
First Reported In

Update #103 · Senate 50-47; UNSC at Barakah; no US paper

Trading Economics / ICE· 20 May 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Brent at $111, IEA at $106: the $5 gap
The widening $5 spread is the daily settlement of institutional uncertainty: no PGSA tariff, no coalition rules of engagement, no WPR text, no UNSC resolution.
Different Perspectives
Israel
Israel
IDF Chief Eyal Zamir declared on 3 June there was no ceasefire for his forces, and strikes killed at least 10 civilians and one Israeli soldier on 4 June. The IDF killed Hezbollah's chief engineer and warned three south Lebanon villages to evacuate on 5 June, advancing into ground the unsigned Washington framework has not caught.
Hezbollah / Lebanon
Hezbollah / Lebanon
Naim Qassem rejected the Washington Lebanon framework on 4 June as "absurd, humiliating and insulting", blocking a ceasefire instrument that required Hezbollah to withdraw north of the Litani before any Israeli withdrawal. Over one million Lebanese remain displaced; the framework's collapse prolongs that toll.
Iran
Iran
Foreign Minister Araghchi publicly coupled the Lebanon ceasefire to the Iran-US nuclear track on 4 June, carrying IRGC authority rather than his own civilian mandate. The IRGC delegation has sent no HEU counter-proposal since Araghchi confirmed no progress that same day; Mojtaba Khamenei's 21 May order to keep the 440.9 kg stockpile inside Iran remains operative.
United States
United States
Rubio placed the Iran-US deal at 95 per cent complete on 4 June while the administration signed no Iran instrument and OFAC designated only Cuban targets. Trump separately disclosed and rejected an airlift plan to collect Iran's HEU stockpile, claiming the material is "entombed", a claim the IAEA cannot verify.
China
China
Beijing's MOFCOM Blocking Rules constrain OFAC enforcement on the mainland; China has not corroborated Trump's verbal account of any bilateral summit, and the rial's failure to hold its Rubio bounce, combined with the IRGC's stablecoin rail closure, increases Chinese yuan-denominated oil-payment exposure through Hormuz.
Bahrain
Bahrain
The IRGC struck Bahrain on 3 June as its sirens sounded and its PAC-3 magazine neared exhaustion; excluded from Rubio's 2 May emergency resupply, Bahrain received a 50-round Federal Register notice on 1 June on an 18-month delivery timeline, meaning it is defending the US Fifth Fleet headquarters on the last rounds it has.