# [FLASH] Iran–UAE Strikes Continue; Fujairah Damage, Schools Shut

*Monday, May 4, 2026 at 8:11 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-04T20:11:45.617Z (4h ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, ENERGY, MiddleEast, Oil, RefinedProducts, Shipping, Geopolitics, Iran
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/5711.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Iran has launched another large salvo of ballistic and cruise missiles plus drones at the UAE, with Abu Dhabi reporting 19 projectiles today alone and cumulative intercept figures showing a sustained high-intensity campaign. Footage and reports indicate a fire in the Fujairah area following prior confirmed Iranian strikes on UAE oil infrastructure, while UAE schools will move to remote learning May 5–8, underscoring ongoing security risk. The episode reinforces a significant and persistent risk premium in crude and product markets, especially given Fujairah’s role as a global bunkering and storage hub and the unresolved Strait of Hormuz blockade.

## Detail

1) What happened:
- The UAE Ministry of Defense reports that Iran today launched 12 ballistic missiles, 3 cruise missiles, and 4 UAVs at its territory, injuring three people. This comes on top of a running tally since the start of the campaign of 549 ballistic missiles, 29 cruise missiles, and 2,260 drones intercepted, indicating a sustained, large-scale strike pattern rather than a one-off event.
- Multiple channels, including Shiite-linked sources, attribute new footage of fires in the Fujairah area to Iranian strikes. Iranian state media deny attacking UAE energy facilities and instead blame a U.S. military action for the Fujairah fire, but this looks like information management rather than a genuine de-escalation.
- The UAE has ordered schools to shift to remote learning from May 5–8 due to renewed Iranian attacks, signaling that authorities expect continued incoming fire in the immediate term.

2) Supply/demand impact:
- Even with high interception rates, repeated ballistic and drone attacks on the UAE—combined with the ongoing Hormuz closure already covered in earlier alerts—raise both physical disruption risk and insurance/operational costs for flows through Fujairah and the wider Gulf.
- Fujairah is a critical global hub for crude/product storage and bunkering; any damage or operational curtailment there tightens available clean product supply and complicates rerouting around Hormuz.
- On the demand side, the move to remote schooling is not itself macro-significant, but it signals broader precautionary measures that could slow domestic activity if extended.

3) Affected commodities/assets and direction:
- Bullish: Brent and WTI crude, Dubai benchmarks; refined product cracks (especially middle distillates and gasoline); tanker and war-risk insurance premia; LNG/Gulf-related freight.
- Safe-haven bid: Gold, USD, possibly JPY and CHF, given the cumulative U.S.–Iran and Gulf escalation.
- Regional risk: GCC equities, UAE credit spreads may widen; local FX pegs are unlikely to move but risk pricing on UAE CDS should rise.

4) Historical precedent:
- Market behavior in the 2019 Abqaiq-Khurais strike and earlier Houthi attacks on UAE/Saudi infrastructure suggests that confirmed, repeated missile activity against Gulf energy hubs can add several dollars of risk premium to Brent while volatility remains elevated.

5) Duration:
- Impact is medium- to long-lived as long as strikes and the Hormuz blockade persist. Even if no further facilities are hit, the perception of elevated structural risk around key UAE infrastructure and shipping routes should keep a material risk premium in place for weeks to months.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** Brent Crude, WTI Crude, Dubai Crude, Gasoil futures, RBOB gasoline futures, Tanker freight rates, Gold, USD index, UAE sovereign CDS
