There are a few places on earth that can jolt the global economy overnight. The Strait of Hormuz is one of them.
Source: Daily Sabah
This narrow stretch of water, hugging Iran’s southern coastline, carries roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and gas. When it trembles, the world listens. And this week, it did more than listen.
A weekend that spooked the markets
According to BBC News, global oil prices surged after fresh strikes across the Middle East intensified fears over the security of the Strait of Hormuz. Brent crude, the international benchmark, leapt by 10% on Monday to briefly touch above 82 dollars a barrel before easing back to around 79 dollars. US traded oil climbed about 7.6% to 72.20 dollars.
The spike followed reports that at least three vessels were attacked near the strait over the weekend. The UK Maritime Trade Operations centre confirmed that two ships were struck by unknown projectiles, sparking fires, while another experienced an explosion in very close proximity. Crews were reported safe.
Iran had already warned vessels against passing through the vital waterway. According to shipping analysts, traffic at the entrance to the strait has slowed dramatically, with around 150 tankers dropping anchor in open Gulf waters rather than risk passage.
Despite the tension, some Iranian and Chinese vessels have continued to transit the area.
Not panic, but real concern
Energy analysts have described the market reaction as sharp but measured. So far, oil transport and production infrastructure have not been directly targeted, which has prevented full-scale panic.
However, the longer the uncertainty drags on, the greater the risk. Some analysts believe prices could climb beyond 100 dollars a barrel if the conflict becomes prolonged.
That matters far beyond trading floors in London or New York.
Why it matters at the petrol pump
Whenever oil prices jump, motorists feel it. The AA has warned that disruption in the Middle East could drive up petrol prices globally. The scale of any increase will depend on how long the conflict continues and whether shipping routes remain constrained.
The ripple effect could stretch even further. Economists caution that sustained high oil prices filter into food production, agriculture, and industrial goods, feeding inflation.
In the UK, inflation has been easing in recent months, prompting the Bank of England to cut interest rates. If energy costs surge again, policymakers may need to pause further rate reductions. Interest rates currently sit at 3.75%, and any reversal in inflation trends could alter the path ahead.
Shipping lanes under strain
The Strait of Hormuz is not the only route under scrutiny. Danish shipping giant Maersk has announced it will pause sailings through the Bab el Mandeb Strait and the Suez Canal, rerouting vessels around the Cape of Good Hope instead.
For travellers and global supply chains alike, that rerouting means longer journeys and higher costs. The Bab el Mandeb and Suez Canal are crucial arteries connecting Europe and Asia. Diverting ships around southern Africa adds significant time and fuel expense.
In London, the FTSE 100 opened nearly 1% lower, with airline shares falling as airspace closures across parts of the Middle East disrupted operations.
Opec+ steps in, but will it help?
In an attempt to stabilise markets, Opec+ agreed to increase output by 206,000 barrels per day. The move is designed to cushion potential supply shortages. Some experts, however, doubt whether this increase would meaningfully offset a prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
For now, markets are watching shipping movements closely. If traffic resumes smoothly, oil prices may settle. If not, the economic tremors could deepen.
A narrow waterway with global weight
The Strait of Hormuz has long been one of the most strategically sensitive chokepoints in the world. Its geography makes it both vital and vulnerable. Any disruption carries outsized consequences.
This latest escalation has once again underlined how interconnected global energy markets remain. A flashpoint thousands of kilometres away can quickly shape fuel bills, airline tickets, grocery prices, and mortgage rates.
For now, the world waits to see whether this is a brief flare-up or the start of something more enduring.
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