The petroyuan is gaining momentum as four key global markets send converging signals. Physical oil, equity valuations, yuan settlements, and rare earth supply chains are all drifting away from dollar-based systems.
China appears positioned on the favorable side of each shift. The gap between physical and paper oil markets has not been this wide since 2008, drawing growing attention from analysts tracking commodity and currency flows worldwide.
Physical oil prices have separated sharply from futures markets in recent weeks. Dated Brent is now trading at $141, while futures remain at $107, a $34 gap. Dubai physical hit $140, and Oman physical reached $166. That spread is the widest since 2008.
Equity markets, however, continue to price in a temporary disruption. The MAG7 has lost $1.1 trillion in market capitalization since the conflict began.
Microsoft is 32 percent off its peak, and the S&P technology sector is down 8 percent since February 28. Energy stocks are up 6.6 percent over the same period.
Market analyst Shanaka Anslem Perera wrote on social media that “the paper market prices a resolution. The physical market prices the molecules that are not there.”
That observation reflects a widening divide between financial pricing and real-world supply conditions. Force majeures have spread across ten countries, with zero restarts reported so far.
The longer the disruption continues, the more pressure builds on paper-based valuations. Analysts say the gap between physical delivery and financial claims may not close without actual supply restoration. The current trajectory points toward structural, not cyclical, dislocation.
Yuan-based oil settlements are rising sharply through China’s CIPS payment system. Twenty-six ghost fleet tankers have left the Persian Gulf since February 28, settling trades in yuan.
CIPS daily volume surged to 928 billion renminbi by March 9. Iran is sending 1.22 million barrels per day to China entirely outside the dollar system.
The dollar still holds 58 percent of global reserves, but settlement flows are shifting. China is capturing the yuan volumes the ongoing conflict generates daily.
The IRGC is also moving to legislate this yuan-based oil architecture into permanent law. That adds a regulatory layer to what began as an informal arrangement.
China also controls 95 percent of heavy rare earth output and processing globally. Export bans introduced in 2025 have already shut automotive production lines across the US and Europe.
The $8.5 billion American diversification push remains years away from producing separated dysprosium at scale. No near-term substitute has emerged.
Deutsche Bank described the conflict as the making of the petroyuan. Analysts, though, say that framing is too narrow.
The war is revealing that the global financial architecture rests on paper claims converting reliably to physical delivery. The April 19 waiver expiry is the next key date markets are watching closely.
The post Petroyuan Rises as Physical Oil, Yuan Settlements, and Rare Earth Markets Decouple From Dollar Systems appeared first on Blockonomi.


