Economy | Europe
What Schrödinger's Cat Has to Do With the Iran War Oil Market — The Trader's View
Oil market analysts are invoking Schrödinger's cat to describe the impossible position traders are in right now. Here is what they mean and what it tells us about oil prices for the next three months.
Oil market analysts are invoking Schrödinger's cat to describe the impossible position traders are in right now. Here is what they mean and what it tells us about oil prices for the next three months.
- Oil market analysts are invoking Schrödinger's cat to describe the impossible position traders are in right now.
- The Schrödinger's cat comparison appeared in a March 27 analysis piece from one of the most respected commodity economics desks in the industry, and it has since been picked up by financial journalists across three conti...
- In Schrödinger's famous thought experiment, a cat in a box is simultaneously alive and dead — both states are true simultaneously until the box is opened and one state is confirmed.
Oil market analysts are invoking Schrödinger's cat to describe the impossible position traders are in right now.
The Schrödinger's cat comparison appeared in a March 27 analysis piece from one of the most respected commodity economics desks in the industry, and it has since been picked up by financial journalists across three continents — because it captures, with unusual precision, the specific character of the uncertainty that oil markets are currently navigating.
In Schrödinger's famous thought experiment, a cat in a box is simultaneously alive and dead — both states are true simultaneously until the box is opened and one state is confirmed. The oil market in late March 2026 is in an analogous position: traders are simultaneously pricing for a world in which the Strait of Hormuz reopens relatively quickly and oil prices normalize, AND for a world in which the strait remains restricted for months and oil prices continue rising. Both scenarios exist simultaneously in the current market. Every trade is being placed in the knowledge that the resolution of the ambiguity could make it spectacularly right or spectacularly wrong.
The specific manifestation of this uncertainty is visible in the structure of the oil futures curve. The front-month contract — for oil deliverable in the next 30 days — is trading at a significant premium to contracts further out. This 'backwardation' structure reflects the market's belief that the current tightness is real and immediate, but also its expectation that the situation will eventually resolve in a way that reduces prices over a longer time horizon. The premium above the forward curve is, essentially, what the market is charging for the resolution risk.
For businesses that need to plan — airlines booking jet fuel, manufacturers locking in feedstock costs, heating oil distributors pricing winter contracts — this uncertainty structure is extraordinarily difficult to manage. Hedging against both scenarios simultaneously is expensive. Choosing one scenario and hedging against it creates exposure to the other.
The traders, in the meantime, are watching the April 6 deadline with exactly the intensity that a quantum physicist would watch the opening of Schrödinger's box.