Crude oil prices jumped nearly 2.5% on Monday after US-Iran peace talks stalled and the Strait of Hormuz remained effectively closed, tightening global supply fears. Goldman Sachs responded by raising its fourth-quarter price forecasts for both Brent and WTI crude.
Why the Strait of Hormuz Matters So Much
The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman through which roughly 20% of the world's traded oil passes daily. When it is disrupted or closed, oil that would otherwise flow freely to Asia, Europe, and beyond gets choked off, forcing buyers to pay more or scramble for alternative suppliers. With the strait effectively shut and no clear diplomatic resolution in sight, traders priced in a sustained supply squeeze.
The stalled US-Iran talks removed a key near-term catalyst that markets had hoped would ease tensions. Without a deal, the prospect of Iranian oil returning to global markets in larger volumes looks distant, and the physical risk to shipping through the strait stays elevated.
Goldman Sachs Raises Its Forecasts
Goldman Sachs revised its Q4 price targets upward for both Brent crude, the global benchmark, and WTI, the US benchmark. The bank's move signals that one of Wall Street's most closely watched commodity desks now expects tighter supply conditions to persist into the final months of the year. Revised forecasts from major banks tend to influence trading desks, fund positioning, and corporate hedging decisions, so the upgrade carries weight beyond just a number change.
The new Brent Q4 target of $90 per barrel, if realised, would represent a meaningful increase from recent trading levels and would feed through to fuel costs, airline margins, shipping rates, and inflation readings in oil-importing economies, including India.
For India, which imports roughly 85% of its crude oil needs, sustained prices near $90 a barrel would widen the import bill, put pressure on the rupee, and complicate the government's fiscal math around fuel subsidies and retail pump prices. Refining margins, however, could benefit if product cracks remain wide.
Watch for any movement in the US-Iran diplomatic track, updates on Strait of Hormuz shipping conditions, and whether OPEC+ producers signal any output response. A resumption of talks or a reopening of the strait would quickly reverse some of Monday's gains, while further escalation could push prices above Goldman's revised target.