Trump says Iran has ‘days left’ before it’s forced to halt oil production. Others say it could be 2 months.


President Trump’s mid-April blockade of the Strait of Hormuz is largely about forcing Iran’s oil industry to confront the “shut-in date” when its oil storage capability is exhausted and production literally stops.

That would be a dramatic economic development for Iran, as oil wells are difficult to restart and there is a risk of permanent damage.

The White House’s logic is “that the Iranian economy will be under such strain that the political leadership will accept a deal that Trump can announce,” Eurasia Group founder Ian Bremmer wrote in a new note Monday.

The problem is that few know when that deadline will hit — and estimates vary considerably.

Bremmer’s own group has suggested that Iran might have about a month’s time to hold out. Others have suggested that things will come to a head earlier in May. Still others have suggested June as a possibility.

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TOPSHOT - US President Donald Trump gestures during a meeting with Lebanon's Ambassador to the US, Nada Hamadeh Moawad, and Israel's Ambassador to the US, Yechiel Leiter, at the White House in Washington, DC on April 23, 2026. US President Donald Trump met Lebanese and Israeli envoys at a new round of peace talks Thursday, with Beirut seeking a one-month extension of a shaky ceasefire set to expire. (Photo by Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP via Getty Images)
President Donald Trump is seen during a meeting with Lebanon’s Ambassador to the US on April 23. (Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP via Getty Images) · BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI via Getty Images

Trump, as is his wont, offered the most dramatic take when he told Fox News on Sunday that “they only have about three days left [before] it just explodes.”

“You can never rebuild it the way it was,” the president added.

Trump’s rhetoric has implications for ongoing peace talks.

“It appears Trump’s new strategy is to simply wait out the regime,” Tobin Marcus of Wolfe Research wrote in a note to clients on Monday. That is based both on confidence that the US blockade will work alongside Trump’s hesitance to restart a “hot war.”

But a problem for markets is that Marcus’s group estimates that Iran still has up to two months before production shut-ins begin in earnest. He noted the possibility of “a long, painful staring contest” and called Trump’s projection of an imminent explosion “nonsense.”

If this standoff drags out for much longer, Capital Economics said in their own analysis, “policymakers and market participants will find it increasingly difficult to keep ‘looking through’ the crisis.”

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STRAIT OF HORMUZ, IRAN/OMAN -- APRIL 7, 2026:  Maps4Media processed and enhanced Sentinal-2 satellite imagery shows a broad view of the Strait of Hormuz between southern Iran and Oman's Musandam Peninsula, including surrounding islands, coastal terrain, and turquoise shallow-water zones at the entrance to the Persian Gulf. The image provides regional context of one of the world's most strategically important maritime chokepoints for global oil and commercial shipping. Please use: Satellite image (c) 2026 Maps4media.  (Photo enhanced and published by maps4media via Getty Images)
Satellite imagery shows the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most strategically important maritime chokepoints, earlier this year. (Maps4media via Getty Images) · maps4media via Getty Images

The reason Iranian shut-ins were not an issue in the early stages of the war was that Iran’s own blockade of the Strait of Hormuz pointedly excluded their oil exports.

That meant for about the first six weeks of the conflict, with US acquiescence, Iran was able to export roughly the same amount of oil out of places like Kharg Island and into global markets as before bombs began falling.

But then, in mid-April, Trump announced the US naval blockade after peace talks collapsed, writing that “Iran will not be allowed to profit off this Illegal Act of EXTORTION.”

The growing question for the energy markets and the global economy is how quickly this move might push the Iranians into major concessions.

In-person talks remain elusive, and Trump has taken to touting that the strait is “sealed up tight.” Over the weekend, Iran offered a new proposal that — according to Axios — includes an end to the US blockade of the strait but with significant sticking points, including Iran’s proposal to defer nuclear talks.

Trump has repeatedly said that a top priority of the war is that Iran “never” gets a nuclear bomb.

Iran’s new proposal did little to move markets on Monday, with crude oil prices still hovering around $100 per barrel.

The proposal was dismissed by some market observers. Terry Haines of Pangaea Policy called it “unserious on its face, not designed to give the US anything to work with in negotiations.”

Ben Werschkul is a Washington correspondent for Yahoo Finance.

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