Oil Tops $100! Goldman Says Real Alpha in Oil Stocks?
$WTI Crude Oil - main 2604(CLmain)$ posted its biggest single-session move in years. $Brent Last Day Financial - main 2605(BZmain)$ is now near $110/bbl — up over 70% vs Q4 2025 average. Most retail traders rushed into oil ETFs. Goldman Sachs quietly dropped a note this morning suggesting that's the wrong trade.
Hormuz Disruption: 17x Larger Than the Russia Shock of 2022
The Strait of Hormuz — carrying roughly 20% of global oil and LNG supply — is effectively shut. Goldman Sachs estimates the total hit to Persian Gulf flows at 17mb/d, a disruption 17 times larger than the peak April 2022 hit to Russian oil production.
Pipeline alternatives via Saudi Arabia and UAE can theoretically redirect up to 3.6mb/d — but actual redirection over the past four days is only 0.9mb/d. The gap isn't closing.
Goldman commodities team warns oil prices could exceed 2008 and 2022 peaks if Hormuz flows remain depressed through March.
Goldman Is 38% Above Wall Street Consensus — Because the Equity Market Hasn't Caught Up to Oil Prices Yet
Here's what most traders rushing into $United States Oil Fund LP(USO)$ are missing.
Goldman just raised EU Big Oils 2026 EPS estimates by 55%, placing them 38% above Wall Street consensus — the biggest gap in years. The reason: stock prices are still anchored to old consensus numbers, while Goldman's models now reflect the actual forward curve.
Translation: the equity market hasn't repriced what oil prices are already telling you.
And unlike USO — which gives pure commodity exposure but carries contango decay risk — oil majors offer:
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55% earnings upside baked into Goldman's revised 2026 estimates
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Dividend + buyback yields of 8-12% at $76/bbl Brent (Goldman Exhibit 2)
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A re-rating catalyst when the rest of Wall Street is forced to upgrade their numbers
The Stocks Goldman Is Buying (And Two They're Selling)
🇺🇸 $Exxon Mobil(XOM)$ — 20% Hormuz upstream exposure, highest earnings leverage among U.S. majors. Highest risk, highest reward in a prolonged closure scenario.
🇺🇸 $Chevron(CVX)$ — Zero direct Hormuz upstream exposure. The "defensive energy" play — full oil price upside with no production disruption risk. Goldman's preferred U.S. name if the conflict drags on.
🇬🇧 $SHELL PLC(SHEL.UK)$ — Target $99 vs current ~$83. 19% upside. Goldman Buy. 7% Hormuz upstream exposure — meaningful but manageable.
🇬🇧 $BP PLC(BP)$ — Target $44 vs current ~$39. 12% upside. Goldman Buy. 12% Hormuz exposure — slightly higher risk than Shell.
🇸🇦 Saudi Aramco — Target SR30 vs current SR26. 16% upside. Goldman Buy. The ultimate oil price beneficiary — geopolitical proximity is the obvious risk.
⚠️ Who Goldman is selling:
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$Equinor ASA(EQNR)$ — Sell. Stock has run -22% implied downside at current price vs Goldman's target.
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OMV — Sell. -20% implied downside. Both stocks have priced in more than even Goldman's upgraded estimates.
⚔️ USO vs Oil Majors: What's Your Pick?
The case for USO: Pure, liquid, direct commodity exposure. If Hormuz stays closed and Brent hits $130+, USO captures every dollar of upside immediately. No earnings risk, no company-specific news flow to navigate.
The case for oil stocks: Goldman is 38% above consensus on 2026 EPS. When the rest of Wall Street upgrades — and they will — stock prices have to reprice. You get oil upside plus a re-rating catalyst. Plus 8-12% shareholder returns while you wait.
Three Questions for Discussion:
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USO or oil stocks — where would you put fresh money today, and why?
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If Hormuz reopens next week, do you hold oil majors for the dividend re-rating thesis, or exit immediately?
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Goldman is 38% above consensus — do you think the rest of Wall Street upgrades to meet them, or does Goldman walk back their call first?
Drop your view below — and tell us which name you're watching 👇
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The Dynamic: Goldman’s $100+ calls are often "aspirational" targets based on peak disruption; the rest of the Street is slower to move because they model long-term demand destruction.
The Likely Outcome: Goldman walks back first. History shows they lead the charge up but aggressively "normalize" their price targets the moment physical barrels start flowing again to avoid being caught on the wrong side of a crash.
The Verdict: Expect a Goldman "tactical adjustment" (downgrade) within 48 hours of any de-escalation news.
The Reaction: A reopening triggers an immediate $10–$15 "war premium" collapse; momentum traders will exit instantly.
The Dividend Thesis: If your entry price allows for a sustainable 5%+ yield at $70 Brent, you Hold; the structural shift toward capital discipline means majors won't slash payouts just because the crisis ended.
The Verdict: Hold if you are an income investor; Exit if you are playing the commodity price action.
I would prefer oil majors over United States Oil Fund. Producers such as ExxonMobil or Chevron benefit from high crude while paying dividends and buybacks. USO is a futures vehicle and suffers from roll costs, so it works better for short-term trading rather than fresh capital deployment.
2. If Hormuz reopens
A reopening of the Strait of Hormuz could remove the geopolitical premium quickly and oil may retrace. I would trim pure crude exposure, but still hold quality majors because strong cash flow above ~$80 oil supports dividends and balance sheets.
3. Goldman’s bullish call
When Goldman Sachs publishes targets far above consensus, peers often upgrade gradually after prices move. If tensions persist, consensus likely shifts higher. If risk fades quickly, Goldman may soften its view.
I’m watching $Chevron(CVX)$ as a defensive play and $Exxon Mobil(XOM)$ for higher-risk, higher-reward exposure. Shell and BP also look attractive, with solid upside and manageable Hormuz exposure, letting me capture oil price gains while earning shareholder returns.
Even if the Strait of Hormuz reopens, I’d likely hold the majors for their dividend and re-rating thesis. For fresh money today, I favor selected oil stocks over USO, while keeping an eye on geopolitical developments to adjust positions if supply disruptions ease or sentiment shifts sharply.
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USO (ETF): Best for pure tactical exposure; it captures the immediate "volatility spike" if supply is choked, but suffers from roll decay (contango) over time.
Oil Stocks: Best for fundamental value; majors (XOM, CVX) offer "free" optionality on high oil prices while providing a 3-4% dividend floor and aggressive buybacks.
The Verdict: Put fresh money into Oil Stocks—you get paid to wait for the upside, whereas USO bleeds capital if the breakout stalls.
While the United States Oil Fund ($USO) provides direct commodity exposure, the analysis suggests energy stocks like $Chevron(CVX) and $SHELL PLC(SHEL.UK) offer better risk-adjusted returns due to undervalued earnings and potential re-rating.