G7 Finance Ministers Convene Emergency Paris Meeting; UBS Warns Oil Stocks Near Record Lows by Month-End
Original: G7 finance ministers to meet amid warning of economic consequences of prolonged Strait of Hormuz closure View original →
G7 finance ministers convene in Paris on Monday and Tuesday (May 18–19) for an emergency session dominated by two interconnected crises: the prolonged Strait of Hormuz closure and surging long-term borrowing costs across major economies.
UBS warned that global oil stockpiles could approach all-time lows by the end of May if the Strait remains closed. The Strait carries approximately 20% of global seaborne oil trade; military activity linked to Iran has choked exports from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the UAE for multiple weeks. International crude prices have surged more than $20 per barrel over the period, adding a commodity-driven inflationary shock on top of already elevated core inflation across G7 countries.
Eurogroup head Pascal Donohoe stated that opening the Hormuz Strait "is of utmost importance," framing it as a shared G7 economic security priority. CNBC reported that the meeting agenda includes coordinated Strategic Petroleum Reserve releases, potential emergency energy financing mechanisms, and diplomatic messaging on Iran.
The energy shock is amplifying pre-existing bond market stress. The 30-year U.S. Treasury yield has crossed 5.1%, and German Bund yields are at decade highs. The combination of commodity-driven inflation and fiscal pressure from higher interest costs is straining G7 government budgets simultaneously.
Adding a structural complication, the UAE has formally exited OPEC. UAE officials characterized the move as a strategic economic decision rather than a political statement — but the departure weakens OPEC's collective production control at precisely the moment when coordinated output adjustments are most critical.
Watch for: the G7 Paris joint communiqué language on SPR coordination and any signal of direct diplomatic engagement with Iran on Strait reopening.
Not investment advice. Verify all figures with primary sources before acting.
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Iran's Army spokesperson warned on May 10 that ships from countries joining U.S. Iran sanctions will be barred from the Strait of Hormuz. Brent crude closed Friday at $101.29 per barrel, up 95% in Q1, with cumulative supply losses approaching one billion barrels.
Brent crude fell 9.1% to $90.38 on April 17 after Iran said the Strait of Hormuz was open, while the S&P 500 rose 1.2% to a record. On April 18, Iran said control of the strait had reverted to strict military management, and AP reported that UKMTO said IRGC gunboats fired on a tanker.
A US-Iran peace deal framework is advancing, with proposed terms including a freeze on Iran's nuclear enrichment, release of frozen Iranian assets, and reopening of the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping. Iran is expected to respond formally within 48 hours through Pakistan as mediator. Brent crude has fallen 14% from $126 to around $108, with WTI dropping below the $100 psychological level. Equity futures rallied broadly on the development.
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