Oil Climbs Again as Gulf Ship Seizures and Attack Risk Keep Traders on Edge

Oil prices rose sharply on May 15 as the market reacted to a fresh combination of Gulf shipping risk and fading confidence in a stable U.S.-Iran de-escalation path. Brent was up 3.3% at $109.19 a barrel and WTI was up 3.7% at $104.89, with both benchmarks on track for strong weekly gains as traders focused on the lack of progress toward ending ship attacks and seizures around the Strait of Hormuz. The immediate backdrop was not only diplomatic tension. It also included a vessel seized off Fujairah and taken toward Iranian waters, an Indian-flagged cargo vessel that sank off Oman after a suspected strike, and the continuing reality that traffic through Hormuz remains well below pre-war norms even as more ships begin filtering through.
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| Fast reader take | Latest confirmed signal | Operational meaning | Commercial consequence | Shows up first | Closest stakeholders |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oil is rising because shipping danger still looks unresolved |
Brent rose 3.3% to $109.19 and WTI rose 3.7% to $104.89 on May 15.
Brent $109.19
WTI $104.89
3%+ daily rise
|
The market is still attaching a large risk premium to Gulf transit, not pricing in a clean normalization. | Freight, bunker, and physical crude pricing remain vulnerable to every new maritime security incident. | Stronger crude benchmarks and more nervous tanker sentiment. | Oil traders, tanker owners, charterers, refiners. |
| A fresh seizure has put vessel capture risk back in focus |
a ship was boarded by unauthorized personnel northeast of Fujairah and headed toward Iranian waters.
Fujairah
headed toward Iran
AIS loss
|
The threat has moved beyond generic war-risk language into live vessel-control incidents near a critical export area. | Owners and insurers have one more reason to treat anchorage and waiting positions as high-risk exposure points. | More caution near UAE approaches and higher security review for idle ships. | Shipowners, insurers, security teams, port users. |
| Attack risk now includes smaller commercial craft, not only tankers |
India said an Indian-flagged cargo vessel sank off Oman after a fire caused by a suspected drone or missile strike.
suspected drone or missile
vessel sank
all crew rescued
|
The risk environment is broad enough that smaller non-tanker ships are also exposed to destructive outcomes. | That widens the risk map from pure oil logistics to regional commercial shipping more broadly. | Higher caution for feeder, coastal, and specialty operators. | Regional cargo owners, smaller operators, marine underwriters. |
| Hormuz traffic is improving only from very depressed levels |
Iran claimed 30 vessels crossed in one day, while pre-war averages were around 140 daily and Kpler counted 10 ships in 24 hours.
30 claimed crossings
140 normal daily
10 ships in 24h
|
The corridor is functioning more than at its worst point, but still nowhere near normal commercial throughput. | Even partial traffic recovery does not erase the supply risk premium because the gap to normal remains very large. | Continued queueing, selective sailings, and uneven export timing. | Crude exporters, LNG shippers, importers, analytics firms. |
| The market still fears renewed military escalation |
Trump told Xi he was losing patience with Iran and that the Strait of Hormuz must reopen.
losing patience
Hormuz must reopen
peace deadlock
|
Oil traders are now balancing modest traffic improvement against the risk of another military turn. | Any bullish relief from additional crossings can be quickly reversed by escalation headlines. | Intraday volatility and stronger geopolitical premium. | Commodity desks, macro funds, freight markets, hedgers. |
| Official U.S. supply assumptions are also getting more severe |
The EIA now assumes Hormuz stays effectively shut through late May and that Middle East shut-ins are worse than previously estimated.
late-May effective closure
bigger shut-ins
slower recovery
|
The energy market has official support for the idea that shipping disruption is feeding directly into a larger supply shock. | Oil price strength is not only headline-driven. It is also being reinforced by a tougher supply baseline. | Stronger support under crude and bunker prices. | Governments, refiners, oil traders, shipping companies. |
Oil Risk Premium Tool
This built-in tool measures how much current Gulf shipping danger is still supporting oil prices. It combines vessel seizure risk, strike risk, traffic weakness, and official supply deterioration into one live stress score.
Live market inputs
Adjust the sliders to estimate how strongly maritime security events are still feeding into oil pricing and shipping behavior.
Live readout
This section converts the current shipping and supply picture into one score showing whether the oil rise still has a strong maritime security foundation.
The latest oil move still looks heavily supported by shipping insecurity, not just by diplomatic headlines.
Prices are reacting to news flow, but the shipping layer is not yet doing most of the work.
Ship risk is clearly helping keep oil higher, though the premium is still somewhat contained.
Seizures, attacks, and weak traffic are materially reinforcing crude prices and freight nerves together.
The market is pricing the Gulf route itself as a persistent supply constraint rather than a short-lived security disturbance.
The strongest current takeaway is that oil is not rising only because diplomacy looks weak. It is rising because actual shipping events, from vessel seizures to sinkings to reduced traffic, are still feeding directly into the supply-risk story.
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