[Robin] Brooks: So let me give you two ways of thinking about what’s going on, both of them are really about trying to think about what kind of risk premia need to be priced in oil, given all the massive uncertainty that we have. The first way that I’ve been thinking about this is—I spent a lot of time working on Ukraine and Russia and sanctions after the invasion four years ago. Russia produces about 10 million barrels of oil per day. It exports, of that, about 7 million barrels of oil per day. The Strait of Hormuz has transit of about 20 million barrels of oil per day. So the Strait of Hormuz is roughly 3 times what Russia could have been. And remember, in the days right after the invasion, markets were really worried about Russian oil being embargoed. There was a whole discussion about that. So the rise in Brent, which is the global benchmark oil price, is about 70% from two weeks before the outbreak of war in the Gulf to now. On a similar time horizon back in ‘22, it was 20%. So we have roughly a 3X in terms of the rise in oil prices. So when people come to me and say “$150 or $200 for oil prices” and we’re currently at $115, roughly, then I think, “why, what’s the rationale?”
The second perspective is on the supply shortfall that we have and using price elasticity of demand to think about: “how much does the price need to rise if demand has to do all the adjusting in the short term,” which it does. And “what kind of numbers do we come up with if we make reasonable assumptions?” So I put out a Substack note today—thank you so much for reading my Substack, I’m incredibly flattered and stressed as a result— if you assume that the Strait of Hormuz goes from 20 million barrels of oil per day to 10, it’s basically oil from the Gulf is running at half of its normal capacity, and you assume a price elasticity sort of in the middle of the range that the academic literature has, which is about 0.15, then you get that this would generate a rise in oil prices of between 60 and 70%. So again, if I think about what we’re pricing in markets now versus what basic back-of-the-envelope-calculations tell you, then I think we’re roughly in the right ballpark.
That is from his interview with Paul Krugman. Via Luis Garicano.









