The IEA release represented a “one-month offset to a potential disruption to one-third of Russia’s 6 million barrel per day (bpd) seaborne oil export flows,” analysts at the bank said in a note.
Oil prices scaled more than seven-year highs on Wednesday amid the intensifying Ukraine conflict.
The Wall Street bank said demand destruction “is now likely the only sufficient rebalancing mechanism, with supply elasticity no longer relevant in the face of such a potential large and immediate supply shock.”
Goldman Sachs previously lifted its one-month Brent crude oil price forecast to $115 a barrel from $95.
“A short-term de-escalation or a potentially faster ramp-up in OPEC+ production would not derail our view for structurally higher prices,” the bank said.
Russia’s seaborne flows were likely the worst hit due to limitations in sourcing shipping insurance, letters of credit, and crews willing to head into high-risk locations, it added.
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Interview: How the Incoming Administration Can Unleash American Energy – Alex Epstein