Oil Shockwaves: Hormuz, Prices, and Asia’s Response

Here’s your latest briefing for 2026-04-01.

Today we unpack five big shifts that matter for energy markets, trade, and growth.

We look at what is happening in Hormuz, how Iran is holding exports, why China may be better covered than most, and what higher oil prices could mean for producers and big firms in China.

Hormuz Shock Rewires Gulf Oil Trade

Disruption in the Strait of Hormuz is changing how Gulf oil reaches buyers.

Traffic through the choke point has dropped hard, and more barrels are being pushed through backup routes instead.

The UAE is sending more crude through its Abu Dhabi pipeline to Fujairah, which helps it avoid Hormuz and boosts Fujairah’s role as a logistics hub.

One report says flows through the strait fell from about 12.3 million barrels a day to 7.8 million barrels a day, showing how severe the shift has been Source.

If the disruption lasts, oil and LNG prices may need to reflect a lasting Middle East risk, not just a short shock Source.

Iran Is Still Shipping Oil — and Cashing In

Iran has kept oil exports close to prewar levels, even while the wider region faces disruption.

That matters because higher crude prices mean each barrel brings in more cash.

One estimate says Iran averaged about 1.6 million barrels a day of crude exports between March 1 and 23 Source.

Another report says at least 11.7 million barrels were sent to China through Hormuz since the war began Source.

With prices above $100 a barrel in some reports, Tehran is getting a rare wartime boost from the same market shock hurting others Source.

China’s oil shock test may become an advantage

China is facing higher oil costs, but it may be better prepared than most big economies.

Analysts say years of stockpiling, supply diversification, and faster electrification are helping cushion the blow.

Goldman Sachs says China is better positioned than many peers to handle the shock Source.

The bigger risk may come later, through slower global growth, tighter U.S. financial conditions, and weaker trade flows Source.

That is why investors are paying more attention to Chinese battery and EV names as a hedge against long-term oil dependence Source.

Oil’s Strength Is Lifting the Producers

Stronger crude prices are helping oil producers.

When prices rise, upstream companies usually see cash flow improve fast.

That can mean more free cash flow, more buybacks, and better stock performance if spending stays disciplined.

EOG Resources is a recent example, with one review noting shares rose about 14% over 30 days as oil stabilized and supply concerns grew Source.

The simple takeaway is that durable oil strength can still re-rate energy stocks higher Source.

China’s majors tighten belts as growth gets stress-tested

China’s biggest companies are becoming more careful with spending.

Weak demand, market swings, and policy uncertainty are making long-term plans harder.

Instead of broad expansion, many firms are protecting cash, cutting nonessential costs, and delaying large projects.

That matters because China’s growth model still depends a lot on corporate investment.

When major firms pull back, the pain can spread to suppliers, builders, equipment makers, and local economies.

Policy support can help, but the bigger test is whether China can improve margins, lift domestic demand, and keep funding strategic sectors like tech and industrial upgrading Source.

The key question is whether this caution is temporary or a sign that confidence is still weak Source.

Sources

Bottom line: Hormuz risk is no longer just a headline.

It is changing routes, lifting prices, rewarding some exporters, and forcing Asia to adapt faster.

The next move will likely come from supply routing, price pressure, and how long markets keep treating this as a lasting risk instead of a short spike.

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