Saudi Aramco just posted its strongest quarterly profit in over a year. Its CEO used the occasion to deliver one of the most direct assessments yet of how long the global oil market may stay disrupted.
The earnings were good news. The message that came with them was considerably more sobering.
What Amin Nasser said about the Strait of Hormuz and oil market recovery
Aramco CEO Amin Nasser issued a pointed warning about the timeline for oil market normalization in emailed comments accompanying the company’s Q1 2026 results on May 10, according to Bloomberg.
“If trade flows resume immediately or today through the Strait of Hormuz, it will take a few months for the oil market to rebalance,” Nasser said. “But if trade and shipping remain curtailed by more than a few weeks from today, we anticipate the supply disruption to persist, and the market to normalize only in 2027.”
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That is not a warning about a temporary spike. It is a statement that the world’s largest oil company believes the structural damage to supply chains from the current conflict may take the better part of two years to fully repair, even under an optimistic reopening scenario.
Nasser also addressed the broader lesson for the industry. “While Aramco has been able to mitigate some of the impact thanks to strategic foresight, such as the East-West pipeline, global energy system supplies remain constrained,” he said. “The energy industry needs to plan and invest more in resilience.”
Aramco’s Q1 2026 earnings and the East-West pipeline advantage
The results that accompanied Nasser’s warning were strong. Saudi Aramco reported Q1 adjusted net income of $33.6 billion, up from $26.6 billion in Q1 2025. Cash flow from operating activities came in at $30.7 billion. Capital expenditures of $12.1 billion supported growth objectives, according to the company’s official Q1 2026 press release.
The board declared a Q1 2026 base dividend of $21.9 billion, up 3.5% year-on-year, to be paid in the second quarter. Free cash flow came in at $18.6 billion, impacted by a $15.8 billion working capital build. The gearing ratio rose to 4.8% as of March 31, 2026, from 3.8% at the end of 2025, Aramco confirmed.
In his official remarks accompanying the results, Nasser said: “Aramco’s first-quarter performance reflects strong resilience and operational flexibility in a complex geopolitical environment. Our East-West Pipeline, which reached its maximum capacity of 7.0 million barrels of oil per day, has proven itself to be a critical supply artery, helping to mitigate the impact of a global energy shock and providing relief to customers affected by shipping constraints in the Strait of Hormuz.”
The pipeline sharply ramped up to maximum capacity during Q1, supporting exports via Saudi Arabia’s west coast, with domestic and international storage capacity providing additional optionality, Aramco noted.
Why normalization is harder than simply reopening the Strait
Nasser’s warning about a multi-month recovery even under a best-case scenario reflects a structural reality that oil traders have been grappling with since the conflict began. The problem is not just about shipping lanes. It is about the cumulative loss of supply, the drawdown of global inventories, and the time required to replenish them.
The conflict has now entered its third month. By the time any ceasefire agreement is signed and shipping resumes at normal volumes, the market will have been operating with significantly constrained supply for a sustained period. Inventories that were already relatively lean heading into the conflict have been drawn down further. Restoring them requires months of above-trend supply, not simply a resumption of normal flows.
Some shipments have continued moving through Hormuz. According to Bloomberg, Aramco’s trading unit is among firms that have sent crude through the Strait in recent weeks on vessels running with transponders switched off to avoid detection. But those volumes are a fraction of the corridor’s pre-war capacity, and the risks of transit remain significant.
M.Sprecher/Getty Images
The economic and market implications of a prolonged disruption
Oil prices have remained close to $100 per barrel since the conflict began, according to Yahoo Finance Markets. That level is high enough to create meaningful economic consequences beyond the energy sector.
Higher crude prices flow directly into transportation costs, manufacturing inputs, and consumer fuel prices. Central banks that had been building toward rate cuts face a more complicated calculation when energy is driving inflation higher. Governments already dealing with elevated borrowing costs may find fiscal pressure mounting as energy-import bills rise.
For oil traders and investors, Nasser’s warning reinforces the case for a sustained risk premium in crude prices. If the world’s largest oil producer believes normalization is at least a year away under extended disruption scenarios, the floor for prices is likely higher than it would be if the market believed a swift resolution was plausible.
Key figures from Aramco’s Q1 2026 results and Nasser’s market assessment:
- Aramco’s total hydrocarbon reserves: 247.2 billion barrels of oil equivalent as of end of 2025
- Share buyback program: $2 billion to $3 billion over 18 months, starting March 2026
- Aramco employs more than 76,000 people globally and operates in the Kingdom and worldwide
- Some crude shipments have continued moving through Hormuz on vessels running with transponders switched off to avoid detection
- Aramco’s 2026 capital investment guidance: $50 billion to $55 billion, in line with its strategic growth priorities
Source: Aramco’s press release
What Aramco’s resilience reveals about the global energy system’s fragility
The most important signal from Aramco’s results is not the profit number. It is the gap between what a company with best-in-class infrastructure can manage and what the broader global energy system can absorb.
Aramco has the East-West pipeline. It has strategic flexibility, operational depth, and the financial resources to navigate the disruption better than most producers. Despite all of that, its CEO is telling the market that even a rapid resolution does not equal a rapid recovery. The barrels lost over the past three months cannot simply be reinstated overnight.
For the companies, consumers, and governments that do not have Aramco’s structural advantages, that message carries a sharper edge. Nasser’s call for the energy industry to invest more in resilience is both a strategic observation and a forward-looking warning that the current disruption may not be the last of its kind.
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