# [FLASH] Iran Imposes De Facto ‘Toll Booth’ in Strait of Hormuz

*Thursday, March 26, 2026 at 9:12 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-03-26T21:12:38.638Z (3mo ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, ENERGY, Middle East, Oil, Shipping, RiskPremium
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/359.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Iran is tightening control over the Strait of Hormuz, forcing vessels to hand over detailed data, reroute into Iranian waters, and in some cases pay for passage. Combined with over 350 oil tankers already stranded awaiting Iranian permits, this effectively weaponizes a core chokepoint and materially raises the risk premium on seaborne crude and product flows from the Gulf.

## Detail

1) What happened: According to AP, Iran has begun enforcing much stricter control over transiting ships in and near the Strait of Hormuz, requiring detailed information disclosures, rerouting ships into its territorial waters, and in some instances demanding payments for passage – described by analysts as a “toll booth” system. This follows earlier reports that more than 350 oil tankers are stranded in the Sea of Oman and Gulf, waiting for Iranian permits. The move comes amid an ongoing shooting war involving Iran and US–Israeli forces and explicit US contingency planning around Kharg Island.

2) Supply/demand impact: The Strait of Hormuz handles roughly 17–20 mb/d of crude and condensate exports and significant LNG volumes from Qatar. Even partial administrative obstruction – delays, rerouting, and arbitrary fees – can:
- Delay loadings and arrivals by days to weeks, effectively reducing prompt physical availability.
- Push up freight rates and insurance premia sharply (5–20% near term is plausible) as owners price in regulatory and seizure risk.
- Incentivize some shipowners to avoid the area, tightening effective tanker supply and widening time spreads (backwardation) in crude benchmarks.
This is not yet a kinetic shutdown, but it represents a structurally higher friction cost and latent risk of escalation to seizures or closures. The stranded 350+ tankers already imply a material short-term dislocation in routing, demurrage, and scheduling, with immediate bullish pressure on prompt barrels and refining margins.

3) Affected assets and direction: Bullish for Brent and Dubai benchmarks, Middle East crude differentials, and LNG spot prices in Asia. Tanker equities and freight indices (e.g., TD3C) likely bid on higher earnings expectations. Bearish pressure on import-dependent EM FX in Asia if LNG and oil prices spike. Gold also benefits from higher geopolitical tail risk.

4) Historical precedent: Episodes in 2011–2012 when Iran threatened to close Hormuz, and 2019’s tanker seizures, triggered multi-percent daily moves in Brent and significant insurance cost spikes despite no full closure. The current mix of war plus a functioning Iranian ‘permit/toll’ regime is arguably more severe.

5) Duration: Unless rolled back by negotiation or countermeasures, this is more structural than transient – it represents a new Iranian leverage mechanism. Market should price a sustained higher risk premium in Middle East barrels and shipping for weeks to months, with tail risk of sudden further escalation driving outsized single-day moves.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** Brent Crude, WTI Crude, Dubai Crude, Qatar LNG FOB, Front-month LNG JKM, Tanker freight indices (TD3C, TD1), Energy equities (integrated oils, tankers), Gold, USD/EM Asia FX basket
