Strait of Hormuz News & Views

Strait of Hormuz News and Views

Gateway to the Persian Gulf

Malacca Watches: How the Hormuz Vacuum Is Educating the World’s Largest Chokepoint

The Malacca Strait carries 23.2 million barrels per day, 29 percent of global seaborne oil, through a 900km corridor with no treaty-backed toll authority. Between 20 and 24 April, six major outlets ran Malacca explainers triggered by the Hormuz vacuum. Asian capitals are pricing in what had been a dormant vulnerability. The Hormuz crisis is teaching the world what the cost of ungoverned chokepoints actually looks like.

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The Qatar LNG Vacuum: Eight Weeks, Zero Loaded Tankers, Two Billion Cubic Metres Per Week

No loaded LNG tanker has exited Hormuz since late February. Qatar’s seventy-seven million tonne capacity at Ras Laffan, roughly twenty percent of global LNG, has no pipeline alternative. Shell declared force majeure 11 March. Full operations are not expected until August. The governance question is whether the eight-week vacuum becomes a sixteen-week vacuum.

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The Cost Stack on a Single Hormuz Transit Today: Six to Ten Million Dollars, Funding Nothing

A fully loaded VLCC through Hormuz today carries six to ten million dollars of incremental cost above the January baseline. War-risk premium, freight uplift, IRGC toll, demurrage, P and I. Not one dollar funds pilotage, escort, or a published rule book. Suez charges an equivalent VLCC eight hundred thousand and includes all of it.

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Iran Is Collecting Hormuz Tolls in USDT and Bitcoin. The Infrastructure Works. The Governance Does Not.

Phemex analysis confirms the Strait of Hormuz is now a Bitcoin and stablecoin tollbooth. One dollar per barrel, up to 2 million per VLCC, settled in USDT on Tron and Bitcoin on Lightning. Public estimates run to 7.5 billion dollars a year at full scale. The infrastructure is operational. The question is not whether tolls can be collected. Iran has proven they can. The question is under what governance.

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Seventy Two Hours to Ceasefire Expiry. Islamabad Is the Signal. Northwood Is the Substance.

The US Iran ceasefire expires Wednesday 22 April. Iran says no talks planned. US delegation heading to Islamabad regardless. Brent up 7 percent Monday morning. Three scenarios cover the realistic outcome space, and all three leave the institutional vacuum at Hormuz unchanged. The real signal this week is at Northwood, not Islamabad.

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Greek Shipowners Reject Iran’s Tolls Diplomatically and Pay Them Commercially. This Paradox Is the Case for Paris.

PM Mitsotakis called Iran’s Hormuz tolls completely unacceptable on 8 April. Nine days later a Greek owned VLCC, the Atokos, transited the strait by paying Iran. Greek shipowners hold roughly 20 percent of world merchant tonnage. The gap between diplomatic rejection and commercial payment is exactly what a legitimate multilateral authority resolves.

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