Hormuz blockade drags on; ING hikes Brent crude forecast to $104/bbl

Hormuz blockade drags on; ING hikes Brent crude forecast to $104/bbl
Sayantan Sarkar
28-Apr-2026, 13:14 PM

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Brent crude (ICE Brent futures)

Buy ICE Brent futures (or a Brent ETF like BNO) because ING’s higher 2026 forecasts are driven by a prolonged Hormuz blockade, with ~14m b/d still disrupted and inventories drawing down. The key catalyst is time: recovery through the Strait hasn’t happened after eight weeks, and ING flags a floor above $100/bbl if closure persists through May.

Key Risk: A rapid reopening of the Strait of Hormuz that restores normal flows and stops the inventory drawdown.

Refined products (crack spreads)

Buy refined-product exposure via crack-spread beneficiaries (e.g., gasoline/ULSD crack spread trades, or ETFs like U.S. gasoline exposure if available). ING says product cracks have surged and are already causing demand destruction (flight cancellations, lower petrochemical runs, energy saving). If crude stays elevated, cracks can stay supported even as crude demand softens.

Key Risk: Crack spreads mean-revert fast because demand destruction accelerates more than supply disruption, collapsing product pricing power.

  • ING raises Q2 2026 Brent oil forecast to $104/bbl due to blockade.
  • Hormuz blockade continues: 14M bpd of oil supply remains disrupted.
  • Demand destruction of 1.6M bpd is already visible due to high product prices.

Dutch bank ING has revised higher its crude oil price forecasts due to the prolonged blockade of the Strait of Hormuz following US and Israeli strikes on Iran.

The bank now expects ICE Brent to average $104 per barrel in the second quarter of 2026, up from $96 previously. 

It also lifted its fourth-quarter 2026 forecast to $92 per barrel, from $88. At the time of writing, Brent crude oil was at $104.60 per barrel, up 2.9%, while West Texas Intermediate crude was 2.6% higher at $98.81 a barrel.

Eight weeks have passed since the strikes, which triggered the ongoing blockade of the Strait of Hormuz a critical chokepoint that previously carried around 20 million barrels per day of oil.

Supply disruptions deepen

After accounting for some pipeline diversions and limited tanker traffic, around 14 million b/d of oil supply remains disrupted.

Over the first two months of the conflict, roughly 850 million barrels of supply have already been lost.

Warren Patterson, head of commodities strategy at ING Economics, said the bank had initially expected a gradual resumption of flows through the Strait of Hormuz in April.

That has not happened.

We are now assuming that oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz will slowly start resuming in May and June, and remain below pre-war levels for most of the year.

Warren PattersonHead of commodities strategy at ING Economics

This slower recovery has prompted ING to update its base case assumptions.

“Our new base case sees ICE Brent averaging $104/bbl ($96 previously) over 2Q26, while the significant inventory drawdown and slow recovery towards pre-war flows sees Brent averaging $92/bbl ($88/bbl previously) over 4Q26,” he added.

Oil prices are likely to remain relatively well supported for the foreseeable future, a situation underpinned by low inventories and the ongoing requirement for restocking, whether for commercial supplies or strategic reserves.

“The upside risks to this assumption are a near full closure of the Strait of Hormuz persisting through May, which would likely see Brent finding a floor above $100/bbl for the remainder of the year,” Patterson added. 

A significant risk is a renewed escalation that could nearly halt oil supply by the end of the second quarter in 2026.

If Saudi shipments via the Red Sea and UAE exports from Fujairah are disrupted, oil prices could hit new record highs, Patterson said.

Source: ING Research

Demand destruction already visible

There has been debate about whether current prices are high enough to trigger sufficient demand destruction.

Patterson noted that focusing only on crude prices misses the bigger picture.

“The surge in product cracks mean that refined product prices have seen significant more strength and will be driving demand destruction already,” he said.

While Brent futures are up around 80% so far this year, gasoil and jet fuel prices are up 102% and 120%, respectively.

Warren PattersonHead of commodities strategy at ING Economics

ING estimates that flight cancellations, lower petrochemical plant run rates, and energy-saving measures especially in Asia have already led to around 1.6 million b/d of demand destruction.

“While this is meaningful, it would be insufficient if supply disruptions persist,” Patterson said. 

Patterson warned that if the disruption becomes more prolonged, “substantially higher oil prices across both crude and refined products would still be required to drive additional demand destruction.”