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What We Got Wrong
We spent the week treating the Iran crisis like it was still building when the market had already moved on to pricing execution risk.
Monday's Trader Morning Call led with "geopolitical premium not fully priced" after Brent had already jumped 2.20% Friday. By Wednesday, oil was drifting lower despite no material change in Strait of Hormuz transit (still zero commercial vessels). We kept flagging escalation headlines — Trump's "patience running out," drone strikes on Moscow — as if they were fresh catalysts. They weren't. The market had priced the closure. What it wanted was clarity on duration or reopening, and we didn't shift our framing fast enough.
The European gas storage coverage was technically accurate but editorially soft. We ran the "Europe risks missing 90% target" angle twice in slightly different forms. The data was fine: 34.3% full versus 35.85% last year, needing 130 LNG cargoes monthly versus 120 in 2024. But we didn't interrogate what happens if they miss. Does it matter if they hit 85% instead of 90%? We presented the target like gospel without explaining whether it's genuinely binding or just a political benchmark. That's lazy.
The "Nobody here needs me to tell them not to do this but Jesus Christ in a Cadillac do not do this" headline was a swing at being punchy. It landed nowhere. The article underneath was about Saudi output hitting 1990 levels — a real story — but the headline made it sound like we were about to explain some catastrophic trade setup. We weren't. The mismatch between tone and content made the whole piece feel unserious.
We underplayed China throughout the week. The Trump-Xi summit piece mentioned energy in passing, but we didn't connect it to the Iranian crude flows story we ran the same day. Iran is still moving oil to China despite the US blockade — the *Huge* tanker carried 2 million barrels with its tracker off — and that's a huge deal for how this crisis actually resolves. China buying Iranian crude at a discount while the US blockades Iranian ports is the real geopolitical story, not whether Trump and Xi agreed Iran shouldn't have nukes (of course they agreed on that in public). We covered both threads but didn't braid them together.
The Lake Tahoe power cutoff story (NV Energy dropping 49,000 residents because data centers are claiming grid capacity) deserved more than a brief. That's a microcosm of the energy transition's distribution problem, and we treated it like a quirky local news item instead of a signal about where infrastructure constraints are binding.
Finally, we were thin on weather implications beyond the raw data dumps. We noted the warm bias for Europe, the HDD collapse, weak wind generation — all correct — but didn't translate it into what traders should actually watch. Warmer weather plus weak wind means more gas burn for power, but we didn't make that leap explicit. We gave people ingredients without the recipe.
The Iran coverage wasn't wrong, exactly. It was just behind the curve, still explaining the shock when the market had moved to pricing the hangover.
What We Got Wrong
2026-05-17 17:25
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2 min read
What We Got Wrong — What We Got Wrong
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