Why did oil prices rise about 60% when global production only fell ~8%?
Because oil demand is highly inelastic in the short term, traders reacted to the disruption and narratives by buying physical oil, and insurance and shipping constraints amplified the market shock — producing a price move far larger than the supply contraction alone.
Which countries had export routes that reduced the global impact of the Hormuz closure?
The UAE and Iran had pipelines to ports that bypass Hormuz, Saudi Arabia relied on an older pipeline and Red Sea terminals, and Iraq shifted some exports via a Turkey pipeline — together these limited the global supply loss.
How did marine insurers affect oil exports after the conflict began?
Major marine insurers canceled war-risk policies and war-risk premiums rose dramatically (roughly tenfold), making shipping more expensive or impossible for many operators and further restricting oil flows.
What is the short-term price elasticity of oil demand mentioned in the video?
Academic research cited in the video places short-term oil demand elasticity around -0.1, meaning a 10% price increase reduces demand by only about 1%.
How much of world oil normally passed through the Strait of Hormuz and how much did production fall in March 2026?
About 20% of the world's oil passed through the Strait of Hormuz; global oil production shrank by roughly 8% in March 2026 during the conflict.