Brent Oil Spot Price Surges to $141 as Physical Cargoes Hit Highest Level Since 2008

S&P Global data showed the spot price for current physical Brent crude oil surged on Thursday to $141.36, the highest level since the 2008 financial crisis.

The demand for Brent oil delivered within the next ten to thirty days is reflected in the spot price. There is currently a tight physical supply due to the significant disruption caused by Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which is indicated by the high cost of more immediate oil deliveries. The price was $32.33 more than the June delivery

Brent crude futures contract, which ended Thursday at $109. Amrita Sen, the founder of Energy Aspects, stated that the futures price is “almost giving a false sense of security that things are not that stressed.” Sen remarked, “You are seeing it, but the financial market is almost hiding the true tightness that is showing up everywhere else.” A barrel of diesel currently costs close to $200 in Europe.

Mike Wirth, CEO of Chevron, issued a warning last week that the futures price does not accurately reflect the extent of the disruption to the oil supply caused by the Strait’s closure. According to Wirth, the market is based on “perception” and “scant information.”  Wirth stated, “There are very real, physical manifestations of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz that are working around the world and through the system that I don’t think are fully priced into the futures curves on oil.”

Ripple: XRP Activity on Binance Plummets to Lowest Levels Since Mid-2025

Crypto markets have been erratic in the short term but generally aimless since the start of the Middle East conflict.  Several significant assets, including XRP, have moved sideways. Concurrently, there has been a significant decrease in XRP transaction activity on Binance, with both deposits and withdrawals reaching their lowest points since 2025.

 

There were about 310,500 deposits and 329,400 withdrawals over the previous 30 days.

There were roughly 18,900 net negative transactions, indicating ongoing net outflows from the exchange. According to CryptoQuant’s most recent analysis, “This decline reflects a continued net outflow from the platform; however, it comes amid a significant drop in the total number of transactions, suggesting a period of market stagnation.”

Activity has drastically decreased since the middle of 2025, whereas earlier periods of the year frequently saw more than 6 million deposits and withdrawals.

Transaction volumes have steadily decreased since then and are currently at their lowest point since that previous peak. According to the data, speculative trading and short-term investor interest have both declined, leading to a calmer market.

Such low activity levels are linked to lower price volatility because of the simultaneous weakening of buying and selling pressures. Some users are still removing assets from exchanges if withdrawals continue to outpace deposits.

According to the analytics platform, this behavior is frequently associated with accumulation strategies or transfers to private wallets, particularly during times when market momentum is low and trading activity is muted.

China’s Yuan-for-Hormuz Fees Trigger Rally in China’s Payment Companies

Listed Chinese businesses that provide cross-border payments increased after the commerce ministry stated that the yuan is being used to pay tolls for passage through the Strait of Hormuz.

PBOC Holds MLF Steady, Injects More Liquidity Into Markets

China National Petroleum Corp.’s financial services division is called CNPC Capital. exceeded Shenzhen’s daily cap of ten percent. Lakala Payment Company. grew by up to 7.9 percent, and Shenzhen, a financial technology company, established Syntron Information Co., which increased by 9.4% before paring gains.

Although China has long aimed to internationalize the yuan, the Hormuz’s actual implementation offers a tangible use case that markets have been anticipating. The development, according to analysts, supports predictions that geopolitical disputes could direct more capital toward China.

According to a recent Lloyd’s List report cited in a post on the Ministry of Commerce website, ships are paying Iran $2 million to pass through the vital energy transportation waterway.

The yuan is emerging as a significant alternative for global capital because of China’s good relations with Iran, according to Shen Meng, a director at the Beijing-based investment bank Chanson. Capital flows to associated industries, such as electronic payment stocks and oil and gas capital firms, will therefore increase.

China’s drive for internationalization has been one of the main factors encouraging the use of the yuan in Hormuz. Iran has been imposing tolls, starting at about $1 per barrel, which are paid in yuan or stablecoins, to regulate shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

Tankers Divert from Europe, Deepening Diesel Supply Crunch

Tankers transporting diesel to Europe have altered their course at sea as the war in Iran raises prices and increases competition for supplies. According to Vortexa and ship-tracking data gathered, four tankers—the Aliai, Minerva Vaso, Grand Ace6, and Elka Delphi—recently loaded diesel-type fuel in the United States and began sailing across the Atlantic.

The other three were indicating Amsterdam, and the Aliai was indicating Gibraltar. All of the ships have since made abrupt turns; the Grand Ace6 is currently signaling Lome in Togo, a country in West Africa, while the other three are traveling southeast. According to Vortexa data, they are collectively transporting roughly 1.2 million barrels of diesel-type fuel.

The tanker diversions occur as the war in Iran effectively closes the vital Strait of Hormuz, upending global energy supply chains. Fuel supplies are already under extreme strain in Asia due to markets being deprived of millions of barrels, and analysts and oil traders have warned that Europe may experience shortages in the upcoming weeks.

Diesel prices have skyrocketed in Asia, as none of the ships are indicating Asian destinations. Another indication of how the crisis is affecting the world’s energy markets is that some of these barrels may eventually be going to buyers in the East.

Philip Jones-Lux, senior oil analyst at energy analytics firm Sparta Commodities, stated, “Europe’s time will come, but right now it is Asia that is screaming the loudest.” He stated that although Europe may be lacking imports of oil products, there is still an abundance of crude available for processing. According to Jones-Lux, a supply shortage is causing crude runs at oil refineries in Asia to decline. Diesel fuel, which powers everything from trucks to construction equipment, is a net import for the UK and the European Union.

Hedge Funds Liquidate Global Equities at Fastest Rate in 13 Years

Goldman Sachs data showed hedge funds sold international stocks in March at the fastest rate in 13 years. its premier brokerage division.

AI stocks are under intense selling pressure right now.

The selling pace was the second-highest since the bank started monitoring the data in 2011 . An increase in short sales, which reflects worries about additional stock market weakness as the fighting in Iran continues, was the main cause of the accelerated selling.

The MSCI All-Country World Index had its worst monthly performance since 2022 in March, falling 7.4%. In the same time frame, the S&P 500 Index dropped 5.1%. Exchange-traded funds were used by quick money investors to convey their pessimistic views on the stock market.

The number of short positions in US ETFs increased by 17% as a result of short positions in large-cap equity ETFs. Eight of the eleven industries in the US market saw net outflows from hedge funds. The close-knit industries of financials, materials, and industrials saw especially robust sales.

Hedge funds were net buyers of media, technology, and telecom stocks for the first time in four months. This buying was motivated by investors covering short positions rather than opening new long positions.

 

Aluminum Crunch Looms as Abu Dhabi Faces Year-Long Production Recovery

The biggest aluminum manufacturer in the Middle East said it could take up to a year for its Abu Dhabi plant to resume full production after an Iranian attack a week ago. According to Emirates Global Aluminium, the Al Taweelah smelter went into emergency shutdown due to significant damage caused by drones and missiles.

EU Announces Anti-dumping Duties on Steel Imports From China, Taiwan and Indonesia

The company has completed an initial damage assessment of the facilities in the United Arab Emirates in contact with clients whose shipments may be impacted, according to a statement issued on Friday. The Middle East produces about 9% of the world’s aluminum. The effects of the war are being felt more acutely because production restrictions elsewhere have reduced stocks, leaving the market with little cushion to withstand shocks.

The industry was ready for production cuts because the Strait of Hormuz disruptions affected the raw material flow even before the attacks on EGA’s facilities.

Aluminum prices on the London Metal Exchange have risen by over 10 percent since the start of the Iran War. Al Taweelah, one of the biggest smelters in the world, produced 1.6 million tons of cast metal in 2025.

According to EGA, a final damage assessment might enable other facilities at the Abu Dhabi site, like an alumina refinery and a metals recycling plant, to resume production sooner. “We are working directly with customers whose deliveries might be impacted by the situation at Al Taweelah,” said EGA CEO Abdulnasser Bin Kalban in the statement.

Gold Tumbles Up to 4% , Snaps 4-Day Rally After Trump’s Ambiguous Iran Speech

Gold fell after US President Donald Trump’s eagerly awaited speech provided little clarity on how to end the Middle East conflict.

Spot gold fell as much as 4.3 percent after Trump stated that the month-long conflict was almost over but that the US would hit Iran “extremely hard” over the next two to three weeks,, ending a four-day winning streak.

The US president urged allies who depend on Middle Eastern oil supplies to find a solution to the impending closure of the Strait of Hormuz, while stating in a prime-time speech that the military operation had nearly met its objectives.

Trump’s speech “basically framed the conflict as a military success story, not a ceasefire announcement. Gold had an impressive run-up to a $4,800 intra-session high.

The momentum may slow after this, given the potential reduction in risk appetite amid concerns about a US ground operation in Iran. Traders had previously wagered that the Federal Reserve might have to cut interest rates because Trump had already stated that the US could leave Iran in two to three weeks.

According to Wong of OCBC, trading will likely be dominated by a desire to reduce holdings before the long weekend, as the market will be closed for the Good Friday holiday. Bullion’s worst monthly performance since October 2008 was a nearly 12 percent decline in March as inflationary risks triggered by high oil prices diminished the possibility of lower borrowing costs, once again outweighing gold’s long-standing appeal as a haven.

US Stocks Tumble as War Anxiety Lifts Crude Oil

US stocks and bonds declined as crude oil surged again. President Donald Trump expressed optimism that the Middle East conflict would soon be resolved and that disruptions to the flow of gas and crude would lessen. Following the benchmark’s one-week high in the previous session, the S&P 500 futures fell 1.2 percent.

Crude Oil Rebounds as Traders React to Escalating Regional Tensions

Asian and European stocks also declined after Trump used a prime-time speech to promise more aggressive action against Iran over the next two to three weeks and to make no specific plans to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Brent crude surged 6.7 percent to almost $108 per barrel.

Gold ended a four-day winning streak, while the dollar was headed for its largest gain in a week. bonds fell globally as traders began placing new bets on tighter monetary policy due to expectations of sustained high oil prices, ending Wednesday’s rally

The deputy CEO of Alphavalue in Paris, Laurent Lamagnere, stated, “This market just isn’t manageable.” “Second-round effects are a major concern for us. Trump had previously stated that he anticipated the US ending the war with Iran in two to three weeks, so optimism had been growing in the lead-up to his speech. Financial markets were affected by the conflict, and as investors reduced their risk, several equity gauges entered correction territory.

SWIFT’s On-Chain Revolution: Tokenized Assets Converge with XRP

Swift’s own technology roadmap, according to the host of a well-known crypto analysis show, has subtly confirmed what on-chain data has been suggesting for months: traditional finance is transitioning from tokenized-asset experiments to actual deployments, and the infrastructure race is narrowing to a few winning models.

According to Ripple Bull Winkle, Swift’s CIO gave the clearest indication, stating that the company is developing “blockchain infrastructure to connect banks to new settlement locations” through a “watch-in” layer that prioritizes composability. To put it another way, Swift is maintaining its function as a messaging and connectivity hub. At the same time, settlement moves elsewhere by plugging into blockchain rails rather than attempting to replace them.

The “wrapper token” model for tokenized finance, which is similar to how stablecoins operate today, is the main focus of the YouTube video. Platforms issue fully backed, bankru in place of native on-chain versions of stocks or ETFs.

According to Ripple Bull Winkle, native issuance lags because it needs direct issuer buy-in, which is more difficult to obtain for companies like Tesla, Apple, or big ETFs.

Additionally, the commentator highlights how these tokens function similarly to stablecoins: they are stored in self-custodial wallets, transferred without authorization, and implemented in DeFi. They contend that both institutional and crypto-native participants find this architecture appealing.

The XRP Ledger is positioned as a settlement fabric that can accommodate tokenized lending markets, stocks, and treasuries.

The primary on-chain metric that Ripple CTO David Schwartz monitors is “cross-pollination” between tokenized assets, such as investors exchanging tokenized treasuries for loan portfolios on the same ledger, rather than just institutional issuance of tokenized assets.

OpenAI Lands Largest Funding Round in History: $122B at $852B Valuation

OpenAI has closed a deal to raise $122 billion from investors at a valuation of $852 billion. This represents the company’s largest funding round to date and supports its expensive pursuit of additional chips, data centers, and talent.

Three major tech companies provided the majority of the funding after months of planning. Amazon. com, decided to contribute $50 billion to the funding round, while Nvidia and SoftBank Group Corp.

Each contributed $30 billion. Amazon’s $35 billion investment is largely dependent on OpenAI going public or achieving the technological milestone of artificial general intelligence. A long list of other notable backers, such as Andreessen Horowitz, Abu Dhabi’s MGX, and D.E, provided funding to the ChatGPT creator. TPG, Shaw Ventures, and T. Price Rowe. The funds raised are part of the company’s valuation.

The funding “blows out of the water even the largest IPO that’s ever been done,” according to OpenAI Chief Financial Officer Sarah Friar.  According to her, the agreement is intended to provide the company with “a lot of flexibility” to invest in computing resources and its AI roadmap during a period of increased market uncertainty, including that resulting from the Iran war.

The AI developer has previously stated that it will invest more than $1.4 trillion in physical infrastructure over the next few years to support its AI software. An overlapping group of venture funds and tech companies, including their cloud and chip suppliers like Amazon and Nvidia, has been enlisted by OpenAI and rival Anthropic PBC to fund those bets.