Live risk window: late-April 2026 supply squeeze
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Fuel, gas pressure, and recent headlines
Energy Shock Watch · April 9, 2026

The countdown to oil shortages, now by country.

Select a country above to see how the same global disruption is landing differently at the pump, in freight, and in household energy costs.

The floating bar stays pinned to the top so you can switch countries while reading and compare the pressure in real time. Figures on this page are sourced snapshots, not live APIs.

Countdown to risk window
April 30, 2026 at 12:00 AM Pacific
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Selected country
United States

Lead headline

Oil at stake
20%
Roughly one-fifth of global oil trade normally passes through Hormuz. That shock lands hardest where import dependency is highest.
Peak panic
$126
Brent crude spiked deep into triple digits during the closure, resetting wholesale pricing long before many consumers saw shortages.
Shortage window
Late April
This is the window when disrupted logistics can start showing up as patchy retail shortages rather than just higher chart prices.
Downstream drag
Fuel. Freight. Food.
The first hit is transport fuel. The second is delivered goods. The third is everything made from petrochemicals or moved by truck.

How the pressure looks in the United States.

Where shortages would bite next.

Recent headlines for the United States.

These links are dated source snapshots used to build the current view. They open in a new tab so readers can inspect the reporting directly.

Shortages arrive after the headline spike.

Price moves happen first because markets react instantly. Physical shortages take longer: ships need rerouting, cargoes need insurance, refiners need feedstock, and local distributors need certainty before they refill tanks.

MAR 2026
Hormuz traffic effectively freezes
The disruption starts in shipping and insurance before it reaches ordinary consumers. Cargo hesitation alone can create a supply gap.
Market shock phase
APR 7
Ceasefire reopens a narrow corridor
Transit improves on paper, but cargo queues, vessel displacement, and elevated risk premiums keep the system from instantly returning to normal.
Transit not normalized
APR 21
Negotiation deadline tests confidence
If diplomacy fails, shipping confidence can vanish again. If it holds, the market still needs time to rebuild inventory and rebalance routes.
Confidence test
LATE APRIL
The risk shifts from markets to shelves
This is the window when delays and thin stocks can become patchy shortages, rationing, or sudden retail cost jumps in exposed countries.
Physical supply phase