Investor Kevin O’Leary predicts the Strait of Hormuz disruptions will resolve within the next 30 days, based on current data trends.
Why Duration Defines the Risk
O’Leary emphasizes the strait as a critical two-mile-wide chokepoint for global oil flows. A short-term blockage poses limited threats, but a three-month prolongation could trigger a global catastrophe. Sustained constraints would elevate crude prices long enough to pressure consumers and businesses across sectors.
Historical Oil Price Thresholds
Analysis of past patterns shows that crude oil sustained above $93 per barrel for a full quarter erodes major U.S. economic segments. Higher energy costs then ripple beyond transportation into overall demand, amplifying the fallout.
Market Bets on Quick Resolution
Current oil pricing reflects trader confidence in a near-term fix, aligned with a one-month timeline. O’Leary’s data review supports this outlook, though he cautions against underestimating extended disruptions.
Japan Faces Heightened Exposure
Japan stands particularly vulnerable, with approximately 70% of its oil imports routed through the strait. Any interruption heightens supply risks for the nation.
Economic and Political Ramifications
Prolonged high oil prices could evolve into a significant voter concern, underscoring the urgency of the 30-day window O’Leary highlights. “The market is currently betting that this whole ‘Hormuz problem’ gets cleaned up in the next 30 days,” O’Leary stated on X. “But if that two-mile-wide spigot stays choked for three months, you’re looking at a global catastrophe.”

