The disruption to crude flows via the Strait of Hormuz has triggered a major reshaping of risk-taking across global oil derivatives markets, with traders retreating from Brent futures, the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies said on Tuesday.
OIES strategists said the ongoing Middle East conflict has not only fueled oil prices and volatility, but it has also altered how participants transfer and manage risk across futures and options markets.
Open interest in Brent crude futures fell by 551 million barrels between the onset of the conflict and May 5, while open interest in WTI futures dropped by 64 million barrels during the same period.
Elevated volatility, tighter value-at-risk constraints, and rising margin requirements materially reshaped market participation and positioning dynamics, OIES analysts said in a report.
The institute said that hedge funds and other money managers accounted for the largest share of the decline in open interest in both Brent and WTI markets, reflecting a broad retrenchment by speculators as trading costs and risk exposure surged.
Managed money traders, including commodity trading advisors and hedge funds, often favor spread trades tied to oil market fundamentals rather than outright directional bets.
However, the OIES said the sharp increase in volatility and the flow of conflicting geopolitical headlines made such trades more vulnerable to sudden dislocations.
As volatility rises, traders operating under value-at-risk limits are often forced to reduce positions, the institute said, adding that higher margin requirements and tighter risk budgets constrained investors from maintaining large futures exposures.
OIES also highlighted a growing divergence between Brent and WTI markets. Open interest in WTI among producer, merchant, processor and user participants and swap dealers increased significantly, while Brent saw a sharp decline.
The institute attributed the divergence partly to increased hedging activity by North American oil producers, many of whom entered the conflict period relatively under-hedged and sought to lock in higher prices through swap agreements with dealers.
Simultaneously, the widening Brent-WTI spread created arbitrage opportunities for exporting US crude to Europe and Asia, encouraging physical trading firms to take long WTI and short Brent positions.
Crude exports from North America reached record levels during the period, reinforcing these cross-market trades, OIES analysts said.
However, despite the decline in open interest, trading volumes surged during the period under review, as market participants continued to transfer risk in response to geopolitical developments, while fewer traders were willing to hold positions overnight.