The initial reaction to the Strait of Hormuz disruption was predictable. Oil spiked. Markets panicked.

Commentary followed the usual script — supply shock, crisis, contagion.

But something more interesting happened next.

The system didn’t break. It adjusted.

Tankers rerouted. US exports surged. Supply chains reconfigured. What looked like resilience was something else entirely: a repricing of the system.

 

From efficient to expensive

The global energy market has shifted from efficient, integrated and cost-optimised to fragmented, politically constrained and structurally more expensive.

The marginal barrel is no longer the cheapest available. It is the most accessible under constraint.

 

Adaptation has a cost

Yes, oil is still flowing.

But now routes are longer, insurance is higher, and supply is politically filtered through rerouted flows, alternative hubs and bypass channels.

These are not temporary frictions. They are embedded costs.

That is how inflation returns — not through demand, but through degraded supply efficiency.

 

Why markets are misreading this

Recent price action tells the story.

Following last week’s CPI print — driven largely by gasoline — oil pulled back below $100. Bonds rallied. Duration found a bid. The move was interpreted as relief.

It wasn’t.

Oil remains historically elevated and, more importantly, structurally supported. The system has adjusted — but at a higher operating cost.

This is not normalisation.

It is stabilisation at a more expensive equilibrium.

 

Second-round effects are already in motion

The implications extend beyond energy.

Fertiliser markets — heavily dependent on natural gas — are tightening. That feeds directly into agricultural production and ultimately into food prices. The transmission is slow, but predictable.

This is where inflation becomes embedded — not in the initial shock, but in the lagged consequences.

 

The policy constraint

Central banks now face a familiar problem.

The shock is supply-driven. Growth is slowing. Inflation is rising.

Policy tools are blunt in this environment.

Following the March CPI re-acceleration, markets have already begun trimming rate-cut expectations. The path forward is no longer a clean easing cycle. It is uncertain, reactive and volatile.

 

What this means for bonds

The duration rally looks more like relief than resolution.

For fixed income — and specifically South African government bonds — that matters.
•    Inflation floors are higher 
•    Term premia must adjust 
•    Real yields remain supported 

We are already seeing long-end outperformance on relief days, but the follow-through is weak. Foreigners are still selling into strength, and real money is not chasing.

Rallies remain tactical, not structural.

Duration is still being distributed, not accumulated.

 

The real shift

This is not about oil.

It is about the cost of keeping the system running.

The world has not run out of energy. It has run out of cheap, reliable energy.

 

Closing thought

Markets adapt quickly.

But they do not always understand what they have adapted to.

This time, the adjustment is not a return to normal.

It is a move to a more expensive equilibrium.

 

Disclaimer: Prescient Securities is a licensed FSP 44074.