The claimed US-Iran MOU has lowered the political temperature, but commercial shipping is still behaving as if the strait remains impaired. The working market is a controlled, dark-transfer bridge, not a normal reopening.
BY THE COMMODITIES DESK · Graves~ 2 MIN · RECORD E1-E8
Strait of Hormuz▓ IRGC-administered narrows ••• Dark / ship-to-ship transit lane
The narrows (red) and the offshore lane where Gulf barrels move dark under US screening · Map: Graves, Commodities Desk · Terrain: NOAA ETOPO1
HORMUZ NORMALIZED · BY 30 JUN 0.22 ± 0.15
rev 1 · updated 16:30 UTC · next 16:00 UTC
The call: p=0.22 that the Strait of Hormuz is commercially normalized by 30 Jun. The political story says reopening; the maritime story still says constraint. The claimed US-Iran MOU has not been published, Vance described it as “a very general document,” and the formal signing is still expected Friday in Geneva, which leaves implementation sitting behind ceremony rather than settled text. [E1]
The physical baseline is worse than the diplomatic language implies. A UKMTO/JMIC advisory dated 14 Jun kept the strait at a severe threat level, said traffic was “significantly reduced,” cited a historical average of about 138 vessels per day, and recorded 2 transits on 11 Jun, 1 on 12 Jun, and 0 on 13 Jun. [E2]
The oil that is moving is not proof of normalization. Reuters reported that “at least 92 ships” have been involved since early May in covert or dark transfers moving “at least 90 million barrels,” using ship-to-ship transfers near Fujairah and Sohar, with US screening through the Navy’s NCAGS office in Bahrain. [E3]
That US role matters because the mechanism is not a declared naval convoy system. Reuters described US support as “surveillance, screening, monitoring and transit windows rather than naval escort,” and the US said “no Central Command forces are taking part” in the offshore transfers. [E3]
Visible traffic has not behaved like a reopened chokepoint. On 15 Jun, a shipbroker told Reuters, “AIS data shows no wave of ships heading towards Hormuz this morning,” and only one LNG tanker had visibly crossed after the framework was announced. [E4]
The operational barrier is not only politics. Reuters reported that maritime-security assessments said clearing mines could take weeks, while BIMCO said the strait remained “very risky” and that “mine-free routes need to be established.” [E5]
Operators are treating safety confirmation, not diplomatic announcement, as the gating item. Reuters reported that Mitsui O.S.K. Lines, the largest tanker operator, told the FT that normal transit would take weeks and would not resume until “safety has been sufficiently confirmed.” [E6]
The market is already discounting a faster outcome than the shipping evidence supports. Brent fell to about $81.15 a barrel by 1059 GMT, touched $80.89, its lowest since 4 Mar, after settling at $83.17 on Monday, and Goldman Sachs now assumes Gulf exports return to pre-war levels by end-July; at the same time, ADNOC has sold at least 30 million barrels of spot crude to Asian buyers this month, grades that must ship through Hormuz. [E7][E8]
Dissent
Foreman places the probability at 0.42. The normalization case is real: Brent is already pricing a fast reopening, ADNOC is selling physical barrels that must cross Hormuz, and the dark regime may be a transitional bridge that flips to normal traffic quickly once the text appears and mine lanes are certified.
The Record · Provenance for this story
E1 ↩ReutersThe US-Iran MOU details “have yet to be made public,” Vance called it “a very general document,” and a formal signing is expected Friday in Geneva.16 Junsource
E2 ↩UKMTO/JMICThe Strait remained at a severe threat level with traffic “significantly reduced”; historical average about 138 vessels/day, then 2 transits on 11 Jun, 1 on 12 Jun, and 0 on 13 Jun.16 Junsource
E3 ↩Reuters“At least 92 ships” have been involved since early May in covert or dark transfers moving “at least 90 million barrels,” via ship-to-ship transfers near Fujairah and Sohar, with US screening through the Navy’s NCAGS office in Bahrain; US support is “surveillance, screening, monitoring and transit windows rather than naval escort,” and the US said “no Central Command forces are taking part” in the offshore transfers.16 Junsource
E4 ↩ReutersA shipbroker said, “AIS data shows no wave of ships heading towards Hormuz this morning,” and only one LNG tanker had visibly crossed after the framework was announced.16 Junsource
E5 ↩ReutersMaritime-security assessments said clearing mines could take weeks; BIMCO said the strait remained “very risky” and that “mine-free routes need to be established.”16 Junsource
E6 ↩ReutersMitsui O.S.K. Lines, the largest tanker operator, told the FT that normal transit would take weeks and would not resume until “safety has been sufficiently confirmed.”16 Junsource
E7 ↩ReutersBrent fell to about $81.15 a barrel by 1059 GMT, touching $80.89, its lowest since 4 March, after settling at $83.17 on Monday; Goldman Sachs now assumes Gulf exports return to pre-war levels by end-July.16 Junsource
E8 ↩ReutersADNOC has sold at least 30 million barrels of spot crude to Asian buyers this month, grades that must ship through the Strait of Hormuz.16 Junsource