Here's something oil markets might not be pricing in: Iran is having a really bad week. Actually, make that a really bad month. The country is experiencing a government-ordered shutdown spanning 21 provinces—that's two-thirds of the country—as protests intensify and the political and economic crisis deepens. Businesses, schools, and government offices are shuttered while President Masoud Pezeshkian grapples with inflation, currency instability, and plummeting living standards.
Violence Escalates as Protests Spread
The protests have turned deadly. A member of Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard was killed in Kouhdasht, a city in Lorestan province, marking the first security force fatality during these demonstrations. That's a significant escalation. Video footage shared by the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran shows intense clashes between protesters and security forces across multiple cities, with crowds chanting anti-regime slogans in packed streets.
The timing couldn't be worse for Iran's leadership. The country is already dealing with a series of major leadership reshuffles, adding another layer of uncertainty to an already volatile situation. Public discontent is being fueled by economic fundamentals that would make any government nervous: persistent inflation, an unstable currency, and deteriorating living conditions.
Oil Markets May Be Missing the Point
Now here's where it gets interesting for energy markets. Crude oil just posted one of its steepest annual declines since 2020, with prices sliding nearly 20% in 2025. Brent crude settled the year around $60.85 per barrel, while U.S. WTI closed near $57.42. The narrative has been straightforward: oversupply fears driven by higher OPEC+ output, flat demand growth, and ongoing sanctions against major producers including Iran, Russia, and Venezuela.
Markets have largely priced in these weak fundamentals. What they haven't fully considered is Iran's internal chaos as a legitimate geopolitical risk factor. Iran remains a key oil producer despite operating under sanctions, and any escalation that disrupts production, export logistics, or regional stability—particularly around the Strait of Hormuz—could quickly change the equation.
The Geopolitical Wild Card
Even limited supply interruptions or heightened shipping risks could tighten markets in the short term, countering the prevailing oversupply narrative. Analysts at BNP Paribas expect Brent to dip toward $55 in early 2026 before stabilizing near $60 as supply growth normalizes. But Iran's domestic instability could put a floor under prices. If the unrest intensifies or spills into broader regional tensions, oil markets might experience sharper volatility than fundamentals alone would suggest.
The point is this: while 2025 has been defined by surplus and soft demand, Iran's internal turmoil represents a potential catalyst that could reshape oil price trajectories at a moment when markets seem fairly complacent about geopolitical risk. Sometimes the most dangerous risks are the ones everyone's ignoring.




