Brent crude oil price forecast if Trump restarts the US-Iran war soon
AI Sentiment: 78/100 Bullish
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Buy Brent crude exposure (e.g., Long Brent futures or BNO). The article points to rising odds of a US-Iran kinetic strike, with Iran likely targeting Middle East energy infrastructure and escalating Red Sea shipping risk. With US inventories already plunging and driving season starting, any war restart tightens supply fast. Technicals also support upside: price is above key EMAs and an inverted head-and-shoulders setup can target >$150 quickly if the conflict escalates.
Key Risk: A deal is reached or the US backs off, sending Brent back below $85 and reversing the supply-tightness narrative.
Sell shipping risk via short exposure to Red Sea–sensitive names (e.g., short Maersk/MSC-linked proxies or buy puts on major container shippers). The second-order effect of a war restart is not just higher oil—it’s disruption of the Red Sea route (12% of oil transport), forcing rerouting, higher insurance, and longer voyages. That hits shipping volumes and margins immediately, and the market will reprice contracts and freight rates before oil fully reflects the shock.
Key Risk: Shipping disruption proves temporary and rerouting costs normalize quickly, so freight and margins recover faster than expected.
- Crude oil price has risen from this month's low of $96 to $106 today.
- There is a risk that the US will restart the war in Iran.
- Such a move would push oil prices to over $150 within weeks.
Brent crude oil price was trading at $106 today, May 13, as investors waited for more details on the US-Iran war after President Donald Trump rejected Iran’s response to the US proposal. It was trading at $106.63, up from last week’s low of $96.
What if the Iran-US war restarts?
Brent crude oil price has risen gradually this week as investors reacted to Trump's response to the delayed response from Iran. In a statement, he said that the response was “totally unacceptable.”
Media reports suggest that Iran made a maximalist response, including the ending of sanctions in exchange for the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.
Therefore, market participants are unsure what will happen next, with most of them predicting that the US will resume fighting. In a statement to 60 Minutes, Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu warned that the war was not over yet.
Some Trump advisors, including Senator Lindsey Graham and Mark Levin, have advised him to launch a kinetic strike against Iran 50 force the country into a deal. Trump also hopes to push China’s Xi Jinping to force Iran into an agreement.
A restart of the war would lead to higher crude oil prices as Iran would use it to target crucial energy installations in the Middle East. For example, it would possibly target Saudi Arabia’s pipeline that is moving millions of oil barrels per day.
Iran also has a long relationship with Yemen’s Ansah Allah, commonly known as Houthis. It may decide to fund it to attack ships in the Red Sea, a move that would shut down a route that accounts for about 12% of oil transport.
The war’s restart would also come at a time when domestic oil inventories are plunging. According to the EIA, inventories have dropped from over 8 billion in April and may move below 7 billion in the next few months.
At the same time, the inventory drawdown will happen at a time when the US driving season is starting. The season normally starts on the final Monday of May, which is after the Memorial Day weekend, and lasts through September.
Analysts believe that a war restart may push crude oil prices to as high as $200. This explains why Trump is reluctant to do it. Besides, data released on Tuesday showed that US inflation is soaring.
The headline Consumer Price Index rose to 3.8% in April this year, higher than the median estimate of 3.6%. Analysts now expect that the headline inflation may blast past 5%, a move that will accelerate if the war restarts.
Brent crude oil price technical analysis
Crude oil price chart | Source: TradingView
The daily chart shows that the Brent crude oil price has bounced back in the past few days, moving from a low of $96 to the current $10 6.5. It has remained above the 50-day and 25-day Exponential Moving Averages (EMA).
Brent has formed two different patterns. For example, there are signs that it has formed an inverted head-and-shoulders pattern, which is a common bullish reversal sign in technical analysis.
There are also signs that it has formed a double-top pattern whose neckline is at $86.25. A double-top normally leads to more downside.
Therefore, the most likely scenario is where the inverted H&S pattern activates if the war restarts. Such a move would push it to over $150 within a few days. If Trump pursues a deal, oil prices will continue falling below $85.
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