--- title: "WTI Rarely Surpasses Brent: What Signal Does This Send?" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/282647790.md" description: "The blockade of the Strait of Hormuz triggers a global reshaping of energy patterns—WTI surpasses Brent for the first time in nearly four years, shifting from an 'U.S. benchmark' to a 'strategic asset'. Spot Brent returns above $140 per barrel; analysts warn it could test the extreme range of $160 to $190, at which point demand destruction effects may emerge, potentially forcing both the U.S. and Iran back to the negotiating table" datetime: "2026-04-14T07:38:54.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/282647790.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282647790.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/282647790.md) --- # WTI Rarely Surpasses Brent: What Signal Does This Send? The conflict between the United States and Iran is reshaping global crude oil pricing logic, with the strategic status of the U.S. benchmark crude surging. On April 2, **the near-month WTI U.S. benchmark crude contract price surpassed the global benchmark Brent crude for the first time in nearly four years; this rare spread inversion reflects the deep impact of the Strait of Hormuz blockade on the global energy supply chain.** Felipe Germini, founder and managing director of energy brokerage firm Germini Energy, stated that since the U.S. and Israel launched attacks on Iran on February 28, WTI has evolved from a pricing benchmark into a "strategic asset". Spot Brent crude prices have now returned to above $140 per barrel, reflecting severe near-term supply tightness triggered by significant blockages in the strait passage. John Paisie, president of Stratas Advisors, forecasts that **oil prices will continue to rise sharply over the coming weeks; spot Brent could test the range of $160 to $190 per barrel, at which point demand destruction effects may emerge, potentially forcing both the U.S. and Iran back to the negotiating table.** ## WTI Surpasses Brent: A Rare Signal Recently, the WTI near-month contract (May delivery) price exceeded the Brent near-month contract (June delivery), marking the first such occurrence in four years. According to Dow Jones Market Data, there have been only four instances in the past five years where the WTI near-month closing price was higher than the Brent near-month price, all concentrated in May 2022. Notably, there is a one-month difference in delivery periods between the two near-month contracts—WTI delivers in May, while Brent delivers in June. Paisie told MarketWatch that **under normal circumstances, this difference is negligible, but under the current "extreme futures backwardation structure," the May WTI contract has gained a significant "scarcity premium."** From the futures curve perspective, the December WTI contract is currently quoted at approximately $77 per barrel, about $25 lower than the May contract, presenting a clear high-in-front-low-behind structure. Analysts note that this shape suggests investors expect supply disruptions to gradually ease over the coming months. As of Monday's close, the May WTI settlement price fell back to $99.08 per barrel, dropping below the June Brent price of $99.36, temporarily ending the spread inversion. ## The Hormuz Blockade Redefines "Accessibility" Behind WTI's brief surge above Brent lies a structural restructuring of the global crude oil supply chain. Germini points out that when approximately 20% of global seaborne crude flows pass through a single chokepoint, and that channel is effectively closed, the meaning of "accessibility" is redefined overnight. Brent-linked crude barrels from the Persian Gulf, Oman, and the UAE suddenly face risk discounts—transit insurance costs for tankers crossing the gulf have surged sharply, and some freight has come to a "direct halt." **In contrast, WTI crude is stored within the U.S., transported via pipelines to refineries along the Gulf Coast, and loaded for export from ports in Houston and Corpus Christi, Texas, without ever crossing disputed waters.** "In a crisis punishing seaborne exposure, being landlocked becomes an advantage," Germini said. "The market quickly realized this." He further noted that prior to the outbreak of conflict, the debate over whether WTI or Brent was superior was merely an academic exercise—Brent was the undisputed global benchmark, while WTI served as the U.S. benchmark, playing a secondary role in international commerce. However, the war has forced the market to confront a practical reality: when Brent-linked crude cannot physically move, buyers rapidly shift toward benchmarks and grades capable of actual delivery. ## Strategic Value and Realistic Limitations of U.S. Crude U.S. crude exports are hitting record highs, yet their capacity boundaries are equally clear. Paisie points out that WTI faces physical constraints on total export capacity, and transportation costs to Asia have surged sharply—Asia being the market most deeply affected by this supply shock. **"U.S. exports can only partially offset the shortfall," Paisie stated, "and cannot fundamentally fill the massive structural supply gap caused by a complete closure of the Strait of Hormuz."** On Monday, the U.S. military announced a blockade of Iranian ports, following the collapse of negotiations over reopening the Strait of Hormuz over the weekend. Driven by this news, both WTI and Brent prices rose. Paisie indicated that this blockade action makes the timeline for resolving the situation "increasingly uncertain," whereas markets had previously expected the WTI premium to dissipate as the strait crisis resolved. Paisie expects that if spot Brent prices continue to approach the upper limit of $190 per barrel, it will trigger substantive demand destruction and ultimately force both the U.S. and Iran back to the negotiating table. 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