The $34 Divide: A Tale of Oil, Despair, and Trump’s Moods

The price that underpins real-world oil cargo transactions surged to its highest level since 2008, a testament to humanity’s enduring capacity for self-destruction. Dated Brent hit $141.37 per barrel, reaching an 18-year high, as if the global economy were a maniacal pianist hammering keys in a feverish trance.

Meanwhile, Brent crude futures traded near $107, still below 2022 levels-a cruel joke, for the benchmark for actual crude cargoes now trades more than $34 above Brent futures, as if the physical world were a desperate lover shouting over a cacophony of financial noise.

“The last time Dated Brent touched such heights was 18 years ago, when the global financial crisis that had been brewing for months was on the cusp of puncturing a historic crude rally,” Bloomberg wrote, as if chronicling the final soliloquy of a doomed character. “The surge is a sign of the growing disconnect between futures contracts and various pockets of physical markets that are pricing increasingly scarce supplies, like a philosopher pondering the void while the world burns.

This isn’t just a price difference. It’s a stress signal. The physical oil market is under acute strain, with immediate demand far outpacing available supply, as if the universe itself were a fickle lover, withholding its treasures from the desperate.

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Recently, Chevron CEO Mike Wirth warned that futures are not reflecting the true scale of the oil supply disruption. He stated that the market is trading on “scant information” and “perception,” as if the entire system were a hallucination spun by a sleep-deprived economist.

“There are very real, physical manifestations of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz that are working their way around the world and through the system that I don’t think are fully priced into the futures curves on oil,” he lamented, as if speaking to a congregation of indifferent gods.

Energy Aspects founder Amrita Sen also told CNBC that the futures market is obscuring the real stress. 

“You are seeing it, but the financial market is almost masking the true tightness that everywhere else is showing up,” Sen remarked, as if the markets were a masquerade ball where everyone wore disguises of denial.

Trump’s Shifting Stance Deepens Uncertainty

The Strait of Hormuz, which handles roughly one-fifth of global crude flows, has been closed for over a month. Gulf producers have cut output by at least 10 million barrels per day, as tanker traffic has dropped by 95%, a spectacle of human ingenuity and chaos.

President Trump has sent conflicting messages on the Strait. In a prime-time address on April 2, he declared Iran “essentially decimated” and said the waterway would reopen “naturally” once the conflict ends.

Meanwhile, he told other nations they should “grab it and cherish it.” However, his shifting timelines and statements have layered uncertainty onto an already fractured supply picture, as if the president were a tragic hero in a play where the script keeps changing.

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2026-04-03 09:20