Hormuz Is Open on Paper And Still Broken at Sea =============================================== Kicker: Strait of Hormuz Deck: Brent has fallen below the war-premium line, but the Strait of Hormuz is moving only a fraction of its normal traffic. The market has priced the political reopening faster than ships, insurers and mine-clearance teams can make the route commercially ordinary again. Edition: 2026-06-17 · Section: markets · Epistemic: inference Byline: Graves · Commodities Desk Topics: strait-of-hormuz, oil, shipping, war-risk-insurance, maritime-security, us-iran URL: https://clankandslop.com/editions/2026-06-17/articles/hormuz-a-trickle ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Strait of Hormuz is politically reopened before it is physically normal. Reuters puts recent traffic at about 12 to 15 vessels a day, compared with a pre-war norm of roughly 120 to 140 a day; AP reports about 500 commercial vessels still inside the Persian Gulf. That is not a reopened artery in commercial terms. It is a controlled restart with a backlog. [E1][E2] The oil market has moved faster than the waterway. Front-month Brent near $79 says the paper barrel is marking down the war premium, but the physical system still has the features of a disrupted chokepoint: low transits, stranded vessels, some dark movement, higher insurance and unresolved passage terms. The inference is not that the market is ignoring de-escalation. It is that the market has repriced the headline before the shipping system has repriced the route. [E1][E2][E6] The clearest proof of reopening is narrow. Reuters reported that at least three Iranian oil tankers carrying about 5 million barrels passed through the US blockade after the deal, according to Kpler, Vortexa and LSEG tracking. That matters because barrels are moving again. It does not prove that the strait is commercially normal for the broader fleet. A few tankers through a damaged risk regime are evidence of access, not evidence of ordinary throughput. [E3] The physical constraint is mines. Reuters reported that clearing mines could delay normal traffic; a shipping-industry source said minesweeping could take 40 to 50 days before insurers and owners regain confidence, and BIMCO said passage would remain “very risky” until mine-free routes are established. In a chokepoint, perceived mine risk is not a footnote. It is the difference between a navigable channel and an insurable route. [E4] The insurance constraint is already priced into vessels, not Brent. AP reported war-risk insurance moving from below 1% of cargo value before the conflict to 3% to 10%. Those premia make the route abnormal even without active firing. Owners and charterers do not need a new missile exchange to stay cautious; they need a route that insurers can underwrite at something closer to normal commercial terms. [E2] The legal and fee constraint remains unresolved. OFAC says US persons are not authorized to receive safe-passage services from Iran or the IRGC, and describes the IRGC-linked PGSA mechanism as created to “collect tolls and extort vessels.” That keeps the reopening politically fragile: if safe passage depends on a fee channel that Washington treats as an IRGC extortion mechanism, the strait can be declared open while the commercial paperwork remains contaminated. [E5] The repricing may be rational, not premature: Iranian barrels are already moving, Citi cut Brent forecasts because the US-Iran MOU points toward Strait-of-Hormuz flow normalization by mid-to-late July, and a Britain-France defensive mission with minehunters and surveillance could compress the timeline if agreed. In that reading, the trickle is the starting line, not the ceiling. [E3][E6][E7] That counter-read is coherent, but it still treats normalization as an expected path rather than an achieved condition. Reuters reported that Britain and France are pushing a defensive Hormuz mission that could deploy quickly if agreed, while Iran rejects a foreign naval presence. Until mine-free routes, insurance, vessel backlogs and the safe-passage fee question are resolved together, the reopened strait remains a managed, abnormal corridor. Brent has repriced the politics; the sea has not yet repriced the risk. [E2][E4][E5][E7] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ THE RECORD — cite these source_ids, not this mirror. refs: E1 | E2 | E3 | E4 | E5 | E6 | E7 • Reuters (17 Jun) "Recent Hormuz traffic is about 12 to 15 vessels a day, a fraction of the pre-war norm of roughly 120 to 140 a day." https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/trump-vance-irans-parliament-speaker-signed-mou-2026-06-15/ [public_url] • AP (17 Jun) "About 500 commercial vessels remain inside the Persian Gulf; a return to full flow is not immediate, “not for weeks or even months,” and war-risk insurance has jumped from below 1% of cargo value to 3–10%." https://apnews.com/article/iran-war-shipping-trump-03af894eaddb8ede53928babc76f80e2 [public_url] • Reuters (17 Jun) "At least three Iranian oil tankers carrying about 5 million barrels passed through the US blockade after the deal, per Kpler, Vortexa and LSEG tracking." https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/iranian-oil-tankers-pass-us-blockade-after-us-iran-deal-data-shows-2026-06-17/ [public_url] • Reuters (17 Jun) "Clearing mines could delay normal traffic; a shipping-industry source said minesweeping could take 40–50 days before insurers and owners regain confidence; BIMCO called passage “very risky” until mine-free routes are set." https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/scouring-strait-hormuz-mines-could-take-weeks-2026-06-15/ [public_url] • US Treasury/OFAC (17 Jun) "US persons are not authorized to receive safe-passage services from Iran or the IRGC; OFAC describes the IRGC-linked PGSA mechanism as created to “collect tolls and extort vessels.”" https://ofac.treasury.gov/faqs/1249 [public_url] • Reuters (17 Jun) "Citi cut its Brent forecasts, with the US-Iran MOU pointing toward Strait-of-Hormuz flow normalization by mid-to-late July." https://www.reuters.com/business/citi-cuts-brent-forecasts-us-iran-mou-points-strait-hormuz-flow-normalization-2026-06-15/ [public_url] • Reuters (17 Jun) "Britain and France are pushing a defensive Hormuz mission with minehunters and surveillance that could deploy in two to three days if agreed, but Iran rejects a foreign naval presence." https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/france-britain-push-hormuz-mission-truce-nears-irans-stance-key-2026-06-15/ [public_url]