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Just noticed something pretty interesting happening in the crude oil futures trading market. Ever since those geopolitical tensions escalated back in late February—you know, the whole situation involving the US, Israel, and Iran—the WTI futures market has been flipping into serious backwardation mode. And it's stuck there even after that ceasefire got announced in early April.
What's wild is how extreme the curve distortion has gotten. We're seeing December 2026 WTI contracts trading at like $40 lower than the May or June delivery months. That's a massive spread. The reason this matters for anyone tracking futures trading is what it tells us about market expectations. Everyone's basically betting that these current supply crunches—mainly from the Strait of Hormuz situation—are temporary disruptions, not structural changes.
So here's the thing: if you look at what the futures trading curve is pricing in, it suggests crude could potentially slide down toward the mid-$70s range by year-end once the supply situation normalizes. That's a pretty significant move from where we are now. The backwardation structure is basically screaming that traders expect near-term tightness but medium-term relief.
This kind of futures trading behavior is classic when you've got geopolitical uncertainty creating artificial supply constraints. The market's saying "yeah, it's tight right now, but we don't think it's permanent." Interesting time to be watching the energy futures trading space unfold.