The two biggest U.S. oil companies joined the growing chorus of voices sounding the alarm on the imminent doom global markets could soon face.
With the Strait of Hormuz still effectively closed, top oil-consuming countries have been rapidly draining their reserves, helping keep crude prices in check.
But Exxon Senior Vice President Neil Chapman warned at an industry conference on Thursday that such drawdowns can’t go on indefinitely.
The U.S. has released about 50 million barrels from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve since the war with Iran started, sending the stockpile down by 12% to 365 million barrels, the lowest since April 2024.
But in key regional oil hubs like Cushing, Okla.—where West Texas Intermediate crude is priced—the situation is more dire. Data from Kpler indicates that inventories there have fallen from 33 million barrels nearly two months ago to about 24.5 million, near operational lows of about 20 million barrels.
“I don’t know, whether it’s two to three weeks or three to four weeks,” Exxon’s Chapman said on Thursday. “What I’m really saying is, once you get to the minimum inventory levels and all-time low inventory levels, there’s only one way to go.”
When the strait first shut down after the U.S. and Israel launched their war on Iran, analysts predicted crude prices could skyrocket as high as $200 a barrel.
That hasn’t happened as massive releases from oil reserves blunted the impact. At the same time, the U.S. temporarily eased sanctions on supplies from Iran and Russia, while countries in Asia began rationing.
Wirth acknowledged that oil prices had not risen as much as people had expected, but said he expects governments to focus on building reserves back up as “insurance” against a future shock, adding more demand and putting upward pressure on prices.
“The likelihood that another shock is around the corner is something policymakers are going to have to bear in mind . . . how long they want to roll the dice before they refill inventories is a question that I think we’re going to see policymakers have to grapple with,” he explained.
Karen Young, a senior researcher at Columbia’s Center on Global Energy Policy, said the best-case scenario is for oil flows to return in 60 days.
“A new normal is a higher energy price environment until demand declines,” Young added. “A new regional normal is a constant threat environment, costly infrastructure diversions and redundancies, asymmetrical violence risk and hardened security surveillance states. Hardly a prescription for growth or trust. Supply shock to price shock to systemic rebalance underway.”



