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Brent Oil Futures Structure Changes Due to Israel-Iran Conflict

Brent Oil Futures Structure Changes Due to Israel-Iran Conflict

Investors priced in the increased likelihood of Middle East supply disruption as they traded Brent crude futures contracts for first-month delivery and those for six-month delivery on Monday.

Spread between Brent August contract and February 2026 contract On Monday,, the price of a barrel reached $6.00, just a little higher than the high of $6.95 on Friday. This was the highest price since October 2023.

The spread was at its lowest level since December 2023, at a discount of 29 cents.

Investors priced in an increased geopolitical premium for oil contracts that are due to be delivered after Israel struck targets in Iran on Friday.

David Wech, Vortexa’s Chief Economist, said that the change in structure was a result of the spike at the front.

The risk of disruption of the 18-19 million barrels of oil per day (bpd), which flow through the Strait of Hormuz, increases if the regional conflict between Israel & Iran intensifies.

Janiv Shah, vice president for commodity markets at Rystad Energy, said that the Strait could squeeze up to 15 million barrels per day of crude oil exports, and 4 million barrels per day of product exports. This, in the current season of demand growth, may cause front-month accounts to fall into a deficit.

The "backwardation", or the trading of contracts above those for future deliveries, is a common sign of tightening oil markets. Its opposite, "contango", signals a weaker market in the short term.

Brent's front-end curve was already tightening as we entered the summer months in the northern hemisphere, albeit with a more shallow backwardated structure. Market participants anticipated a strong peak fuel demand, before a decline later this year, when OPEC, and non-OPEC, supply increases and demand decreases.

The fact that the price of oil hasn't changed much in the past few months suggests that participants in the market do not expect the market to change over the long term. Vortexa's Wech added that a healthy fuel demand for the Atlantic Basin also contributed to the higher oil prices.

(source: Reuters)