Oil markets didn’t just rally this week; they repriced risk in a way that forced traders to adjust positioning quickly. What began as a recovery from prior weakness turned into a sharp geopolitical premium build, with supply disruption fears taking control of both WTI and Brent.
By Thursday night, Weekly June WTI crude is trading $96.91, up $14.32 (+17.34%), a move that reflects more than momentum and signals a structural shift in how the market is pricing near-term supply risk.
Geopolitical Premium Drives Breakout in WTI and Brent
The early part of the week saw crude reverse aggressively higher as tensions between the U.S. and Iran escalated.
The seizure of an Iranian-linked vessel, combined with direct threats of retaliation, forced the market to reprice the probability of disruption through the Strait of Hormuz.
That chokepoint accounts for roughly one-fifth of global crude flows, making it the most critical artery in the oil market, and once that risk returned, the bid in crude became immediate and sustained across both benchmarks.
WTI pushed through key resistance zones and extended higher as systematic and discretionary flows aligned behind the move.
Brent followed in tandem, with both contracts reflecting a rapid expansion in geopolitical risk premium rather than any meaningful shift in underlying supply and demand balances.
The speed of the move signaled urgency in positioning, with traders prioritizing exposure to potential supply shocks over traditional…
