MISSION BRIEF
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The Bryan Mound salt caverns in Freeport, Texas — hollowed out of the earth half a mile down, rated for 247 million barrels, the largest single site in the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve — have been pumping crude to the surface every single day since February 28, the morning America went to war with Iran. Ninety-four days later, as of the EIA release covering the week ending May 22, the entire SPR sat at 365.1 million barrels — down 50 million barrels since the first strike, down 9.2 million barrels in a single week, and closing in on levels last seen when Ronald Reagan was in his second term.
The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively closed for those same 94 days — the narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf, 21 miles wide at its tightest point, through which roughly one fifth of the world's oil and LNG flows on any given morning. Brent crude settled Wednesday at $96.97 a barrel after a brief run above $101 Tuesday, up 48% from one year ago, down from an April 7 intraday peak of $138. The gap between those two numbers is the SPR. The gap is closing.
Kpler's director of commodity research, Matt Smith, described Hormuz traffic this week in one line: "Barring a handful of tankers crossing each day, the strait remains essentially closed." Vessel tracking shows some coordination with U.S. naval assets — individual commercial operators running the gauntlet with CENTCOM on the radio — but volumes remain a fraction of the 20.1 million barrels per day that transited the waterway in the first quarter of 2025. Over 150 tankers are anchored outside the Gulf, waiting. Peace talks are underway through Pakistani intermediaries. Iran sent a proposal. Trump said "great progress" on Wednesday, then rejected the proposal on Thursday.
The SPR was established in 1975 to absorb exactly this kind of shock — a hostile state cutting off Gulf supply. It has been drawn down in four prior emergencies: Desert Storm, Katrina, Libya, Ukraine. This is the fifth. The difference is that the prior four were short. The reserve has now fallen 50 million barrels in 96 days, a pace Morgan Stanley calculated as the fastest quarterly global inventory drawdown in IEA data history — 4.8 million barrels per day between March 1 and April 25. The buffer that was supposed to last months is being consumed in weeks.
Exxon Senior VP Neil Chapman, speaking at an industry conference last Thursday, said the U.S. is approaching inventory levels he called "unheard of." Then he corrected himself. "I mean really, really low levels." The conference room went quiet. Nobody on television called it that.
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Dylan Jovine has the full breakdown.
THE OPERATION
Two parallel drawdowns
There are two separate inventory clocks running right now, and they are both approaching the same floor. The first is the SPR — a political reserve, managed by the DOE, drawn down by presidential authorization. On March 12, the Trump administration announced a release of 172 million barrels, roughly 40% of what remained at the time, in coordination with approximately 30 nations releasing another 230 million barrels from their own strategic stocks — a combined 400 million barrel emergency injection designed to hold prices below $140 while military operations continued. It worked, briefly. Brent came off its $138 peak. It is now back above $96 and climbing again.
The second clock is Cushing, Oklahoma — the physical crude hub, the delivery point for WTI futures contracts, the number that determines whether a refinery in the Midwest has oil to run tomorrow. Kpler data as of this week shows Cushing inventories at approximately 24.5 million barrels, down from 33 million seven weeks ago. The "operationally low" threshold — the level below which refineries begin to ration, futures contracts dislocate, and physical prices decouple from paper — sits at roughly 20 million barrels. That is 4.5 million barrels away. At the current drawdown rate, it is three weeks away.
The U.S. has been exporting approximately half its SPR releases to Europe and Asia, functioning as the global supplier of last resort — a role the system was not designed to play. U.S. distillate stockpiles are at their lowest level since 2005. Gasoline stockpiles are near their lowest seasonal level since 2014. And Chevron CEO Mike Wirth said last week that the pressures now building in the physical market will "flow through more directly" in June and July, once the buffer math stops working.
In Vienna, the seven remaining OPEC+ members — Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Algeria, and Oman, now minus the UAE, which quit the body on April 28 — voted on May 3 to increase production by 188,000 barrels per day for June. The Strait of Hormuz is closed. Saudi Arabia's oil reaches the tanker terminal at Ras Tanura. The terminal sits inside the Gulf. The tankers cannot leave. The production increase is a number on a piece of paper.
Against global consumption of roughly 100 million barrels per day, the June OPEC+ increase represents 0.19% of daily demand. The IEA's April 2026 Oil Market Report projected global oil demand to contract by 80,000 barrels per day this year — but revised that forecast down by 730,000 barrels in a single month, one of the sharpest single-month revisions in the agency's reporting history. The 188,000 barrel increase is smaller than the revision error. Zaye Capital Markets analysts noted the current price already embeds a "conflict risk premium masking underlying demand weakness" — meaning if the strait opens, price crashes; if it stays closed, the SPR runs out. There is no scenario where things stay flat.
The UAE left OPEC+ because it had struck a different deal — a direct emergency dollar swap line from Treasury, endorsed publicly by Scott Bessent before the Senate on April 22, six days before Abu Dhabi announced its departure. Not OPEC barrels. Dollar access. That is what the Emiratis took instead.
RULES OF ENGAGEMENT
Your exposure
The AAA national average for a gallon of regular gasoline was $4.26 on June 3, 2026. On February 26 — two days before the war started — it was $2.96. That is a 44% increase in 97 days, the fastest peacetime fuel price run since the 1973 embargo, driven entirely by a single chokepoint 7,500 miles from the nearest American gas station. The EIA's next weekly retail gas update posts June 9. Chevron's CEO has already told you what it will say.
The SPR was built to hold 714 million barrels. Biden drew it to 372 million during the Ukraine crisis, drawing bipartisan rage and a promise from Donald Trump to refill it. When this war started, it sat at 415 million — partially refilled, not fully. It is now at 365 million and falling by roughly 9 million barrels a week. At that pace, the reserve crosses 300 million barrels — a threshold the DOE's own planning documents describe as the floor for sustained emergency supply operations — before Labor Day. And the Cushing hub will hit operationally low levels first, likely in late June, at which point WTI futures contracts will begin to reprice in ways that have nothing to do with geopolitics and everything to do with whether there is physical oil available at the delivery terminal to settle against.
Mortgage rates track the 10-year Treasury. The 10-year tracks inflation expectations. Inflation expectations track the energy complex. Brent at $97 with Cushing approaching empty is not a gas price story. It is a rates story, a grocery story, a trucking and logistics story — every manufactured good that moved on diesel in the last 30 days is about to reprice on the shelf. The transmission lag is roughly six weeks. That puts the full impact at checkout sometime in mid-July.
The SPR has fallen 50 million barrels in 96 days — the fastest drawdown in the reserve's 50-year history — and is now approaching levels last seen in 1983, while Cushing inventories sit 4.5 million barrels above the threshold where physical crude dislocation begins, Brent is trading at $96.97 after a peace deal that was "close" last Tuesday evaporated by Thursday, and the national gas average at $4.26 has already cost the average American household an estimated $1,200 in additional fuel expenses since February — and the Strait of Hormuz is still closed.
Sources: EIA Strategic Petroleum Reserve Weekly Report (week ending May 22, 2026); EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook, June 2026; AAA Daily National Average Gasoline Prices, June 3, 2026 ($4.26/gal); TradingEconomics Brent Crude spot close, June 4, 2026 ($96.97/bbl); Kpler commodity research / Matt Smith, CNN, June 2, 2026; CSIS "The Strait of Hormuz in 8 Charts," April 23, 2026; Kpler Cushing inventory data via CNN, June 2026; Fortune / Morgan Stanley global inventory drawdown estimate (4.8M bbl/day, March 1–April 25); IEA Oil Market Report, April 2026 (demand revision); OPEC+ communiqué, May 3, 2026 (188,000 bpd June increase); CNBC / Exxon SVP Neil Chapman quote, May 29, 2026; Chevron CEO Mike Wirth FT quote, May 29, 2026; Congress.gov CRS Report R45281, March 11, 2026 (Operation Epic Fury); Axios, March 12, 2026 (172M bbl SPR release authorization); Newsweek / Yahoo News, June 3, 2026 (SPR 365.1M bbl level); RIA "Dollar Dominance Remains Alive and Well," May 29, 2026 (UAE swap line / Bessent Senate endorsement, April 22).
END OF TRANSMISSION.
EYES ONLY
Why the "July 31st Default" looks exactly like 1968
History doesn't repeat, but it rhymes.
March 1968: Central banks ran out of gold. The London market shut down. Gold surged 2,329%.
March 1980: The COMEX hit a delivery wall. Silver miners like Silverado ran 3,989%.
July 31, 2026: We are seeing the exact same "Vault Drain" signals today.
The "Registered" gold inventory is down 25% while prices are at record highs.
This has never happened before.
On July 31st, the music stops for the paper gold cartel.
If you are holding ETFs, you are holding a "parking ticket" for a car that has already been stolen.
I've found one stock - a company sitting on more gold than France and Italy combined - that acts as the ultimate escape hatch.
"The Buck Stops Here,"
Dylan Jovine, CEO & Founder
Behind the Markets
P.S. Most people will wait for the headlines on July 31st to confirm I'm right. But by then, the "1,000% Window" will be long gone. Remember: the people who bought the miners before the 1980 silver crash saw gains as high as 3,989%. The people who waited for the news got nothing. Position yourself before the reset here »
