I know “global chokepoint risk” sounds like something that belongs in a bank slide deck, not in your daily life. But if you drive a car, buy groceries, or so much as look at your investment account, what happens in one narrow strip of water between Iran and Oman is now uncomfortably personal.

That hit me watching UBS commodity analyst Giovanni Staunovo lay out, in plain numbers, what a serious Strait of Hormuz closure means. A shutdown of the Strait has already taken about 10 million barrels of crude per day off the market and that refined products are also being hit, he said in a CNBC interview. Staunovo added that with the passage still restricted, the most likely direction for oil prices is higher, no matter how soothing some political rhetoric sounds.

Put simply, UBS has alarming news for anyone who thought this was just another scare story. If the most important oil chokepoint in the world closes for real, you don’t just get expensive gasoline. You get the kind of supply shock that eats into everything from airline tickets to electricity bills and forces investors to rethink which “safe” assets actually feel safe.

Wall Street has alarming news about oil if the Strait of Hormuz closes.

What UBS is actually warning about

Shutterstock Let’s start with the number that made me pause.

Staunovo said a Strait of Hormuz shutdown could remove roughly 10 million barrels of crude per day from global supply, calling that volume “in jeopardy” if the closure drags on, in his CNBC interview.

Related: Bessent makes stunning claim about the Strait of Hormuz

That’s not a rounding error. For context, the International Energy Agency has said the current Middle East shock is the largest oil supply disruption in history, with about 20 million barrels of crude and petroleum products a day flowing through Hormuz in normal times and flows now down more than 90%, the Buenos Aires Times notes.

The IEA estimates the conflict could cut global oil supply by around 8 million barrels a day this month alone, even before you factor in longer term damage.

Most tanker owners, oil majors, and trading houses have already stopped sending crude, fuel, and liquefied natural gas through Hormuz and that as long as ships stay away, price risk skews to the upside, said Staunovo in CNBC’s interview. He also highlighted a gap between what U.S. officials say about restoring order and what they are actually doing on the ground, saying he is watching actions more than speeches.

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More Oil and Gas: If you strip the jargon away, UBS is saying something brutally simple: if the Strait stays choked, there is no clean substitute for that much oil.

Why this chokepoint is different

I’ve written about plenty of geopolitical scares where analysts warned about a “critical chokepoint.” Hormuz is in a different category.

CNBC, citing multiple experts, notes that about 13 to 20 million barrels of oil and petroleum liquids pass through the Strait every day in normal times, representing roughly one fifth of global consumption.

The IEA and other agencies describe it as the world’s single most important energy corridor, with no quick workaround at anything like that scale.

  • Roughly 20% of global oil supply and a similar share of seaborne liquefied natural gas normally move through Hormuz.
  • Gulf producers like Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates have already had to curb output because they can’t get barrels out, filling storage on land.
  • Shipping giants such as Maersk, Hapag-Lloyd, and CMA CGM have suspended transits, rerouting ships around the Cape of Good Hope and adding 10 to 14 days to voyages, a member advisory on Gulf maritime operations noted.

That’s the part I think matters most for a personal finance reader. This isn’t just about oil underground; it’s about barrels aboveground that suddenly cannot move.

How prices can move when 10 million barrels disappear

We’re already seeing what happens when traders start to accept that this disruption isn’t a two day story.

WTI crude prices jumped more than 8% in a single session after Iran first said it had closed the Strait, CNBC reported at the start of the conflict. Brent futures have risen about 36% from the day before the war began through late March, trading comfortably above $100 per barrel at points.

The IEA says the conflict and near total closure of Hormuz have cut global supply by about 8 million barrels per day this month, and that Gulf producers have collectively shut around 10 million barrels a day of output.

Those are the big picture numbers. Here’s how I see it filtering into your life if UBS is roughly right and 10 million barrels a day stay off the market for any length of time:

  • Fuel and transport: Higher gasoline and diesel prices raise costs for commuting, deliveries, and flights, which filters into everything from ride-hailing to vacation plans.
  • Food and goods: Shipping delays and higher bunker fuel costs push up logistics bills, which large retailers and manufacturers eventually pass through to you.
  • Investments: Energy stocks, commodity funds, and even inflation-sensitive bond markets start to reprice, rewarding some portfolios and punishing others depending on how exposed they are.

Why even “fixing” Hormuz won’t feel normal quickly

Here’s the part you might not want to hear but probably need in your back pocket.

Even if the Strait reopens on paper, the market doesn’t flip back to normal overnight.

A recent International Energy Agency briefing said tanker flows through Hormuz are down more than 90%, and that even with emergency reserve releases, it will take weeks just to get barrels in motion and months to rebuild confidence, Indexbox reported. 

S&P Global Energy’s analysis, summarized by India’s Economic Times, warned that if the closure stretches into months rather than weeks, Brent crude could easily surge to new record highs, despite the 400 million barrel reserve release.

How to act on this information

It’s easy to get lost in the scale of the numbers and forget you still have levers to pull.

Here’s how I’d translate UBS’s warning and everything around it into practical steps for a reader who drives, invests, or both:

  • Build a buffer for energy costsIf your commute or small business runs on fuel, assume higher prices stick around longer than the headlines. That might mean padding your emergency fund or revisiting how much you budget for transport.
  • Check your portfolio’s oil sensitivityLook at how much you indirectly own in airlines, shipping, energy-intensive manufacturers, and refiners. Some may benefit from higher prices, others may be squeezed, and you don’t want to find out by accident.
  • Be careful chasing the spikeI’ve seen traders make and lose fortunes trying to surf oil shocks. If you’re not a specialist, size any energy bets so they can move your portfolio, not your entire life.

What I didn’t realize I wanted from the UBS interview at first was a clearer mental model for just how fragile our “normal” energy life is. By the time Staunovo was done walking through 10 million barrels, shut-in supply, and the limits of emergency reserves, that’s exactly what he had given me.

If the Strait of Hormuz stays constrained, there is no version of the story where nothing in your financial life changes. The opportunity is to decide, now, whether those changes catch you by surprise or show up in a plan you built while everyone else was still hoping this would blow over.

Related: UBS has a message on oil price and the economy