# [WARNING] Iran Publishes Official Map of Hormuz Supervision Zone

*Wednesday, May 20, 2026 at 9:37 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-20T21:37:39.927Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: Iran, StraitOfHormuz, Energy, Oil, MaritimeSecurity, MiddleEast, Shipping
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/7517.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: At 21:05 UTC, Iran’s Persian Gulf Strait Authority released an official map detailing Tehran’s claimed area of supervision over the Strait of Hormuz. This concretizes Iran’s bid to regulate traffic through one of the world’s most critical oil chokepoints amid ongoing U.S. interdictions of Iranian-linked tankers. The move raises legal and operational uncertainty for commercial shipping and could lift the oil risk premium.

## Detail

1) What happened and confirmed details

At 21:05:01 UTC, the Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA) published an official map delineating Iran’s claimed area of supervision over the Strait of Hormuz. This follows recent Iranian legal and institutional steps to assert tighter control over Hormuz, including the establishment of the PGSA and prior statements that all transits should fall under Iranian oversight. The map appears to codify these claims geographically, signaling Tehran’s intent to move from rhetoric and legal framing into an operational posture.

This development comes in the context of earlier reports that the U.S. has boarded an Iranian tanker and is effectively reinforcing a de facto oil blockade, and that Iran has been tightening its own regulatory and political control over Hormuz in response. Today’s map release is the first concrete cartographic assertion of the specific area Iran considers under its supervisory regime.

2) Who is involved and chain of command

The PGSA is a newly formed Iranian authority, almost certainly subordinated to Iran’s central maritime and security apparatus, which in practice means the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy (IRGC-N), the regular Navy, and the Supreme National Security Council. Strategically, this policy direction is driven from the top: Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, the IRGC leadership, and the Rouhani/administration’s security cabinet equivalents (current officeholders assumed from prior context). The U.S. Fifth Fleet, GCC navies, and major flag states for commercial shipping (Panama, Liberia, Marshall Islands, etc.) are key external stakeholders and potential responders.

3) Immediate military and security implications

Publishing a supervision map is a significant escalation in the legal-operational contest over Hormuz. It provides an asserted basis for:
- More frequent Iranian hailing, inspection, or diversion of tankers deemed non-compliant with Iranian rules.
- Tighter Iranian coordination of pilotage and traffic separation schemes within the claimed zone.
- Increased risk of miscalculation with U.S. and allied naval escorts, particularly if Iran attempts to enforce supervision against U.S.-protected or sanctioned cargoes.

While this is not yet a kinetic closure of the strait, it meaningfully raises friction and ambiguity for ship captains and insurers. Expect near-term:
- Heightened IRGC-N and naval presence inside the mapped zone.
- Possible test cases where Iran challenges specific vessels transiting without recognizing PGSA authority.

4) Market and economic impact

The Strait of Hormuz carries roughly a fifth of global crude and a major share of LNG exports from Qatar and other Gulf producers. Any step that increases perceived risk of delay, interdiction, or confrontation tends to widen the geopolitical risk premium on Brent and WTI, and elevate forward freight agreements and war-risk insurance premia.

Short-term market impacts could include:
- Upward pressure on crude benchmarks and time spreads as traders price in route and insurance risk.
- Higher spot and forward tanker rates for VLCCs and LNG carriers transiting the Gulf.
- Modest safe-haven bids into gold and, to a lesser extent, JPY and CHF, especially if naval incidents or confrontations follow.
- Relative resilience of GCC FX pegs but potential pressure on currencies of major net oil importers if prices jump.

Separately, at 21:33:36 UTC, a report that SpaceX holds approximately $1.45 billion in bitcoin ahead of its IPO provides a positive sentiment catalyst for BTC and crypto-linked equities, and marginally for SpaceX-adjacent private valuations. However, this is a sectoral story and does not offset the broader systemic risk from heightened Hormuz tensions.

5) Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Diplomatic and legal responses: Expect strong public objections from the U.S., U.K., and EU maritime powers, and possibly an explicit rejection of Iran’s claimed supervisory zone as inconsistent with freedom of navigation under UNCLOS. GCC states will likely coordinate messaging but avoid overt escalation.
- Naval posture: The U.S. Fifth Fleet and allied navies are likely to increase visible patrols, escorts, and surveillance along the mapped boundaries. Rules of engagement will be reviewed to handle potential Iranian boarding or diversion attempts.
- Shipping and insurance behavior: Shipowners may seek clarification from flag states and insurers. Some may adjust timing, routing, or insurance coverage; war-risk premia could be revised within days. Any actual boarding or diversion by Iran would rapidly amplify these moves.
- Market reaction: Oil and related derivatives could see increased volatility in the next one to two trading sessions. Watch for price action in Brent spreads, LNG shipping names, and Gulf energy equities as leading indicators of perceived escalation risk.

Overall, the map publication does not yet close Hormuz, but it is an operationalization of Iran’s long-signaled strategy to treat the strait as a sovereign leverage point in its confrontation with the U.S. and its allies, with direct implications for global energy flows and market stability.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
The formal publication of Iran’s Hormuz supervision map is likely to support or increase the geopolitical risk premium in crude benchmarks (Brent, WTI), with spillover to tanker rates, insurance costs, and regional FX (IRR unofficial, GCC currencies, safe-haven JPY/CHF). It may also support gold on heightened geopolitical tension. The SpaceX bitcoin holding disclosure is bullish for BTC and crypto-adjacent equities, but systemically smaller than Hormuz-related risk.
