Hormuz risk: 16M barrels move as Iran claims closure, U.S. denies
Original: U.S. and Iran begin peace talks amid conflicting claims over Strait of Hormuz View original →
About 16 million barrels of oil moved through the Strait of Hormuz in one day, according to Vice President JD Vance, while Iran said the waterway had been closed again and U.S. officials denied that claim. The CNBC report was published after fresh Israeli strikes in Lebanon and ahead of U.S.-Iran talks in Switzerland.
The market stake is the physical flow rather than a single equity ticker. Hormuz is a critical oil chokepoint, and even a disputed closure claim can lift freight, insurance, and crude-risk premia if tanker operators slow voyages. Vance said the U.S. side had seen 16 million barrels move through the route, framing the passage as evidence that the strait remained usable despite Tehran's warning.
Iran's Tasnim news agency, cited by Reuters in the CNBC article, said the strait would not be reopened unless the Lebanon ceasefire was respected and waivers for Iranian oil sales were issued. Iran's joint military command tied the closure claim to Israeli operations in Lebanon and alleged U.S. failure to meet commitments under the truce framework. AP, cited in the same report, said Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon killed at least 16 people, including two children.
The U.S. position is the opposite. A Central Command spokesperson told Reuters that Iran does not control the Strait of Hormuz and that traffic was continuing. President Donald Trump also kept pressure on the talks by raising the possibility of tolls if the interim arrangement is not converted into a final deal within 60 days.
For oil markets, the next check is not rhetoric alone but vessel flow, insurance pricing, and whether U.S., Iranian, Pakistani, and Qatari officials can keep the Switzerland talks alive. A verified drop in tanker transits would make this a supply shock; continued passage would keep it a geopolitical risk premium rather than an immediate volume loss.
Not investment advice. Verify all figures with primary sources before acting.
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Brent crude fell 9.1% to $90.38 on April 17 after Iran said the Strait of Hormuz was open, while the S&P 500 rose 1.2% to a record. On April 18, Iran said control of the strait had reverted to strict military management, and AP reported that UKMTO said IRGC gunboats fired on a tanker.
Iran's Army spokesperson warned on May 10 that ships from countries joining U.S. Iran sanctions will be barred from the Strait of Hormuz. Brent crude closed Friday at $101.29 per barrel, up 95% in Q1, with cumulative supply losses approaching one billion barrels.
G7 finance ministers are meeting in Paris on May 18–19 as the prolonged Strait of Hormuz closure drives global oil inventories toward all-time lows by the end of May, according to UBS. The gathering comes as long-term borrowing costs surge across G7 economies and Eurogroup head Pascal Donohoe called opening the Strait 'of utmost importance.'