# [WARNING] Trump, Putin Talk Iran And Ukraine As Hormuz Blockade Hardens

*Wednesday, April 29, 2026 at 6:16 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-04-29T18:16:56.945Z (26h ago)
**Tags**: Iran, Hormuz, Oil, Russia, Ukraine, UnitedStates, EnergyMarkets, NavalWarfare
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/5109.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 17:20–18:01 UTC on 29 April, multiple sources reported a roughly 90‑minute Trump–Putin call focused on Iran and Ukraine, during which Putin offered a temporary Ukraine ceasefire around Victory Day and warned of ‘extremely damaging’ consequences if the U.S. and Israel escalate again in the Middle East. In parallel, Trump publicly reaffirmed that the U.S. naval blockade of Iran will continue until a new nuclear deal, while Brent crude traded around $119–120 and the Pentagon disclosed that the Iran war has already cost $25 billion. This combination signals prolonged tension in the Gulf, a sustained oil risk premium, and potential maneuvering toward a Ukraine framework.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

From 17:20 to 17:45 UTC on 29 April 2026, multiple Kremlin and media summaries (Reports 5, 7, 9, 19, 20, 30, 32, 40, 41, 43–45) confirmed that U.S. President Trump and Russian President Putin held a phone call lasting more than 90 minutes. According to Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov and aligned outlets:
- Putin told Trump he is ready to declare a ceasefire around Russia’s Victory Day period (9 May), and Trump voiced support for this.
- Trump told Putin that “a deal to resolve the conflict in Ukraine is already close.”
- Both leaders criticized the Ukrainian government, saying Kyiv is prolonging the conflict.
- Putin warned of “extremely damaging consequences” if the U.S. and Israel conduct further major military actions in the Middle East.
- Putin stated that a U.S. ground operation in Iran would be unacceptable.

Separately, at 17:20–17:29 UTC (Reports 28, 29, 73, 75), Trump reiterated publicly that the U.S. will sustain a naval blockade on Iran through the Strait of Hormuz until a nuclear agreement is reached, describing the blockade as more effective than strikes. This is consistent with earlier confirmed policy and now framed as open‑ended.

Around the same window, Brent crude was reported above $119.50/bbl, the highest since June 2022 (Report 53), and still trading around $119 per barrel at 17:20–17:28 UTC (Report 28), explicitly linked to the Hormuz blockade and expectations of a prolonged closure. This follows existing FLASH/WARNING alerts on Brent >$120; the new element is the explicit long‑term nature of the blockade and confirmation of sustained price elevation.

At 17:13–17:56 UTC, a Pentagon official testifying to Congress disclosed that the U.S. war in Iran has cost about $25 billion so far (Reports 56, 80), while War Secretary Pete Hegseth defended the conflict and presented a FY2027 defense budget of $1.5 trillion (Report 81), indicating institutional commitment to current operations.

At 18:00–18:01 UTC, the U.S. Federal Reserve announced it is holding the policy rate at 3.75% (Reports 1–2), in line with expectations. While not directly tied to the conflicts, this stabilizes the macro backdrop in which the oil shock is unfolding.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

- United States: President Donald Trump is the principal decision‑maker on Iran policy and the Hormuz blockade. War Secretary Pete Hegseth and Pentagon leadership are executing the Iran campaign and reporting costs. The Federal Reserve’s FOMC has maintained the 3.75% rate.
- Russia: President Vladimir Putin directly engaged Trump, offering a limited Ukraine ceasefire and warning against U.S./Israeli escalation in the Middle East. Kremlin aide Ushakov provided the official readout.
- Ukraine: President Volodymyr Zelensky (Reports 10, 12, 31, 42, 47, 49–52) continues to authorize new operations and rejects concessions on energy‑infrastructure targeting, but was not party to the Trump–Putin call, underscoring that discussions about a ‘deal’ are currently above Kyiv’s head.
- Iran and regional actors: Iran is under active U.S. naval blockade and ongoing conflict, with Hormuz flows constrained. Israel is conducting operations in Lebanon and Gaza, but the key new element is Trump and Putin’s discussion of potential Middle East escalation.

3. Immediate military and security implications

Iran theater / Hormuz blockade:
- Trump’s reaffirmation at 17:20–17:29 UTC of an open‑ended naval blockade until a nuclear deal, combined with public Pentagon disclosure of $25B in war costs, signals that Washington intends to maintain high‑intensity pressure rather than de‑escalate quickly.
- Russian warnings to Trump about “extremely damaging consequences” of further U.S./Israeli military action are rhetorical but underscore Moscow’s interest in deterring a U.S. ground operation in Iran.
- Operationally, a prolonged blockade entrenches a quasi‑maritime siege, increasing risk of further attacks on shipping, remote mining (Report 73 hints at remote‑mine threats in Hormuz), and accidental clashes with Iranian forces or proxies.

Ukraine theater:
- Putin’s stated willingness to declare a limited ceasefire around 9 May, and Trump’s reported claim that a Ukraine settlement is “close,” indicate exploratory diplomacy more than an imminent comprehensive peace.
- A temporary Victory Day ceasefire, if realized, could allow Russia to stabilize lines and reset logistics. Ukraine may view it as a risk of freezing unfavorable lines and has signaled continued offensive intent (Zelensky approving “new operations” and expanding drone and middle‑range strike capabilities in Reports 10 and 12).
- The call demonstrates that Washington and Moscow are again engaging directly over Ukraine’s endgame, with potential implications for Kyiv’s political leverage.

4. Market and economic impact

Oil and energy:
- Brent crude has traded to ~$119.50/bbl, the highest since June 2022, and is fluctuating around $119–120 during the blockade news window (Reports 28, 53). The explicit confirmation that the blockade will continue until a nuclear agreement implies that this is not a transient spike but a medium‑term structural risk premium.
- Prolonged Hormuz disruption threatens up to ~20% of global oil flows and a significant share of LNG traffic. Tanker insurance rates, war‑risk premia, and rerouting costs will continue to grow, benefiting U.S. and non‑Hormuz producers (U.S. shale, Brazil, West Africa) while pressuring Asian and European importers.
- Russia’s confirmation it will remain within OPEC+ (Report 35) suggests no immediate offsetting production increase from Moscow; output coordination with Saudi Arabia and Gulf allies likely continues, keeping supply relatively tight.

Currencies, rates, and equities:
- The Fed’s hold at 3.75% avoids a rate shock but, combined with higher oil, maintains stagflation fears. The U.S. dollar should stay supported versus EM currencies, particularly those of energy‑importing nations.
- U.S. and allied energy equities, shipping, and defense contractors are positioned to outperform. Airlines, logistics, and energy‑intensive industries face margin compression. Inflation hedges (gold, inflation‑linked bonds) remain attractive.
- EM sovereigns with high current‑account sensitivity to oil (e.g., India, Turkey) are vulnerable to spreads widening and currency pressure.

5. Likely next 24–48 hours

- Iran/Hormuz: Expect further diplomatic signaling from Tehran, GCC states, and European capitals on the blockade and nuclear talks. Risk of additional harassment or attacks on shipping remains elevated, especially as both sides test red lines.
- Ukraine: Watch for official Kyiv and European responses to reports of a ‘near’ deal and a Victory Day ceasefire. Ukraine may publicly reject any arrangement perceived as sidelining it or locking in Russian territorial gains, while Russia could frame a limited ceasefire as a goodwill gesture.
- Markets: If Brent holds above $120 or headlines hint at further military escalation around Iran, additional upside pressure on oil and refined products is likely. Rate expectations may start to price a slower Fed easing path due to energy‑driven inflation.
- U.S. domestic politics: Congressional scrutiny of the $25B Iran war cost and Hegseth’s defense of the conflict could sharpen partisan divides, but also cement a bipartisan defense‑spending floor, supporting the U.S. defense sector.

Overall, the convergence of an entrenched Hormuz blockade, sustained Iran war costs, and a strategic Trump–Putin call on Iran and Ukraine marks a significant escalation in the durability and systemic impact of these conflicts rather than a transient flare‑up.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Oil remains under intense upward pressure with Brent around $119–120 on confirmation that the U.S. will maintain the Hormuz blockade until a nuclear deal and on heightened U.S.–Iran war costs. Fed’s hold at 3.75% avoids an additional immediate macro shock but keeps real rates supportive of the dollar. Energy equities, shipping, defense, and gold remain bid; EM importers and rate‑sensitive risk assets remain vulnerable.
