Phil Flynn
Phil Flynn is writer of The Energy Report, a daily market commentary discussing oil, the Middle East, American government, economics, and their effects on the world's energies markets, as well as other commodity markets. Contact Mr. Flynn at (888) 264-5665
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Blocked In. The Energy Report 04/14/2026
We had the initial knee-jerk reactions sent crude futures spiking as high as $104 on fears of a prolonged shutdown in the Strait of Hormuz, but by Tuesday morning the selling pressure kicked in hard. WTI eased back below the $100 mark, with Brent trading around $99 as traders bet on a quick diplomatic off-ramp.
Iran knows that they can’t win militarily and now with Trumps’s blockade of the Strait OF Hormuz he turned the tables on the country that threatened to world by holding the Strait Of Hormuz hostage like a band of pirates.
Trumps blockade, which went into effect Monday targeting vessels entering or leaving Iranian ports and coastal areas, is surgically designed to choke off Iran’s oil export revenue without fully sealing the strait for everyone else. Neutral shipping to non-Iranian destinations (think UAE or Saudi ports) continues to flow, but Tehran is feeling the pinch immediately—no more easy dark fleet sales to China or anyone else.
Trump made it clear this isn’t about permanent closure; it’s leverage. He warned Iranian warships to stay clear or face a “quick and brutal” response, while simultaneously noting that “the right people” from the Iranian side had already reached out wanting a deal. Vice President JD Vance echoed that the ball is now in Iran’s court, and reports suggest U.S. and Iranian teams could resume talks in Islamabad as early as this week. The goal? Force Tehran to reopen the strait fully, dial back its nuclear ambitions and regional aggression, and end the six-week-plus conflict that’s already disrupted global energy flows.
This is classic Trump deal-making: maximum pressure yields maximum results. Iran was already hurting from the war and prior sanctions, but cutting off their remaining oil lifeline—while their economy relies heavily on those exports—accelerates the pain.
Now even with some shadow exports persisting, the financial windfall from high prices during the conflict is now at risk of evaporating. Meanwhile, the U.S. is positioning itself (and American producers) as the reliable alternative, with Trump openly pitching that squeezed buyers like China should load up on U.S. crude instead.
Even as a few shadow exports linger, the days of windfall profits from surging prices are quickly fading.
Trump is also positioning the US as the steady, go-to reliable supplier of oil products and LNG. Trump is actively encouraging buyers like China to seize the opportunity and choose American crude, positioning U.S. producers as the clear winners in the shifting global market.
For energy markets, this de-escalation signal is bullish long-term for stability but bearish short-term for the spike we saw.
In fact, gasoline pump prices are looking like they are peaking actually falling. Regular unleaded is down a penny from yesterday and four cents from last week. Premium and mid-grade are also easing off recent highs. Diesel—the lifeblood of trucking and supply chains—dipped a hair from yesterday and is basically flat week-over-week after its own massive run higher. E85 followed the same modest pullback pattern.
Don’t get me wrong—these prices are still brutally higher than a month ago (regular up nearly 44 cents) and dramatically above year-ago levels (up almost a full dollar), pushing pump prices over $4 for the first time in years. That shock fed directly into March’s big inflation jump. Yet t the momentum appears to be shifting. Retail prices are finally catching a breather even as the spring driving season ramps up. Crude has backed off some of its peak levels, refinery margins are adjusting, and the lag effect at the pump is now working in consumers’ favor for the first time in this cycle
Gasoline and distillate prices, which had climbed on blockade fears, are likely to moderate if talks gain traction before the current two-week ceasefire window closes on April 22. Broader ripples—like tighter fertilizer and helium supplies transiting the region—could still pressure food costs if the stalemate drags, but the market’s rapid pivot shows confidence that Trump’s strategy is working faster than expected.
Despite the Trump critic claims that the blockade was chaos—it’s really calculated economic warfare that’s already delivering results at the negotiating table. Money is rotating out of fear trades and back into positions that benefit from a potential swift resolution. U.S. energy independence looks stronger than ever in this environment, and producers here stand to gain if global buyers shift away from risky Middle East barrels. Still Traveling call 888-264-5665 or email pflynn@pricegroup.com
Thanks,
Phil Flynn
Senior Market Analyst & Author of The Energy Report
Contributor to FOX Business Network
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