Iran’s accusation against the European Union over maritime laws points to continued tensions in the Strait of Hormuz. The market for Strait of Hormuz traffic returning to normal by June 30 sits at
Market reaction
Iran’s accusations against the EU signal ongoing friction, not reconciliation. Traders see no realistic path to normalization by June 30 given the current geopolitical situation. No US-Iran peace deal or concrete de-escalation measures exist, keeping odds for a return to normal traffic at zero. The market has seen no trading volume, which suggests traders have already priced in continued disruption.
Why it matters
The Strait of Hormuz is a major oil transit route, and Iran’s control over it combined with European rejection of the blockade makes this a persistent conflict point. Without a diplomatic breakthrough, this market stays at zero. A YES share would pay $1, but the market treats that outcome as near-impossible.
What to watch
Any movement in US-Iran relations, particularly a peace deal or mine clearance operations in the Strait, would be the most likely catalysts for a shift. Until one of those materializes, the market has no reason to move.
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