# [WARNING] US–Iran Peace Deal Imminent, Hormuz Blockade Terms Emerging

*Saturday, May 23, 2026 at 6:09 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-23T18:09:40.331Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: US-Iran, MiddleEast, Oil, StraitOfHormuz, Diplomacy, Markets
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/7848.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

---

**Summary**: Between 17:22 and 18:04 UTC, multiple outlets and officials signaled that the U.S. and Iran have approved a draft peace deal expected to be announced within 24–48 hours, with some reports detailing an MoU framework to permanently end the regional war, lift the U.S. naval blockade, and reopen the Strait of Hormuz. If finalized, this would end weeks of high‑risk confrontation, reshape Middle East security architecture, and sharply reprice oil and regional assets.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

From 17:22 to 18:04 UTC on 23 May 2026, several converging reports describe a rapidly maturing peace process between the United States and Iran:

- At 17:29 UTC [Report 3], a Washington Times–based item relayed that the U.S. and Iran are expected to announce a peace agreement by Sunday afternoon.
- At 17:22 UTC, a Spanish‑language report from Primicias [Report 32] quoted U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Iranian Foreign Minister Esmail Bagaei announcing “acercamientos para terminar con la guerra” (steps toward ending the war).
- At 17:22–17:28 UTC [Reports 27–28], Axios sourced comments indicate regional leaders are split between urging President Trump to strike Iran or take the existing deal, implying a concrete proposal is on the table.
- At 17:22 UTC, a Pakistani source report [Report 2] told Reuters that an interim deal in its final phase is “fairly comprehensive to terminate the war,” though framed from the Pakistani angle.
- Around 17:08–17:09 UTC, Middle_East_Spectator [Reports 44–47] flagged: (a) a scheduled Trump conference call with leaders of Pakistan, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Jordan, Turkey, and Egypt at 13:00 (likely ET) on Iran; (b) Al‑Jazeera‑sourced MoU details including a permanent end to the war in the entire region, lifting the U.S. naval blockade, reopening the Strait of Hormuz, and eventual U.S. military withdrawal; and (c) Iranian Foreign Ministry rhetoric that Hormuz is “none of America’s business.”
- At 17:44 and 18:04 UTC [Reports 19, 1], Trump told U.S. media he believes “we are getting closer and closer to an agreement with Iran,” that the deal “gets better and better,” and reiterated he will only sign if “we get everything we want.”
- At 18:02 UTC [Report 24], another Washington Times–referencing item states the U.S. and Iran are expected to announce a draft peace deal within 24 hours, with senior officials on both sides having approved it and only final leadership sign‑off pending. The plan would convert the six‑week ceasefire into a permanent peace agreement.

The consistency of timing, overlapping sourcing (Washington Times, Axios, Al‑Jazeera via intermediaries, Reuters citing Pakistani officials), and on‑record presidential statements indicate we have moved from speculative diplomacy to an advanced, near‑final negotiation phase.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

- United States: President Donald Trump is clearly the ultimate decision‑maker, as reflected in his interviews. Secretary of State Marco Rubio is leading the diplomatic track. The upcoming conference call with key regional leaders suggests heavy involvement by the NSC and CENTCOM in shaping security guarantees and withdrawal parameters.
- Iran: Foreign Minister Esmail Bagaei and the Iranian Foreign Ministry are the public face. Supreme Leader Khamenei and the IRGC command would have to sign off on any final deal, especially clauses on Hormuz, regional proxies, and U.S. basing.
- Regional states: Pakistan, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Jordan, Turkey, and Egypt are identified as direct participants in the 1:00 PM call, likely to secure buy‑in on ceasefire lines, proxy restraint, and security architecture in the Gulf, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen.

3. Immediate military/security implications

- If the reported MoU framework holds, we are looking at:
  - A permanent end to active hostilities between U.S./allies and Iran and its regional partners (including in Lebanon per the Al‑Jazeera outline).
  - Lifting of the U.S. naval blockade and reopening of the Strait of Hormuz to normal commercial traffic.
  - A phased or accelerated withdrawal of U.S. forces from key regional positions, which will require complex implementation and could leave vacuums.
- In the very near term (next 24–48 hours), both sides have strong incentives to avoid incidents that could derail the announcement, but spoilers (non‑state actors, hardline IRGC elements, or regional rivals) may attempt provocations.
- Israel and Hezbollah: The MoU description explicitly includes Lebanon. This could force de‑escalation along the Israel–Lebanon front but might also trigger Israeli concerns about Iranian entrenchment via political rather than military means.

4. Market and economic impact

- Oil: The prospect of an imminent, credible peace framework and Hormuz reopening is strongly bearish for crude risk premia. Front‑month Brent and WTI are likely to gap lower on the headline once markets open or as electronic trading digests the news, though the magnitude will depend on details about timeline and verification.
- Shipping and insurance: Tanker and war‑risk insurance rates tied to Gulf routes should compress if a binding framework is confirmed, boosting tanker equities and potentially easing freight costs for Asian and European refiners.
- FX and rates: Reduced war risk should weaken classic safe havens (USD, CHF, JPY) at the margin, support EM FX—especially high beta Gulf and Turkish assets—and steepen curves in oil‑exporting EMs on improved fiscal outlooks. U.S. Treasuries and German Bunds could see mild outflows as geopolitical hedging unwinds.
- Equities: Middle East, energy, defense, and shipping names will react in differentiated ways. Big oil may sell off on lower oil, while regional banks, airlines, and import‑dependent industries rally. Defense contractors with heavy exposure to Gulf missile and air defense may see sentiment weaken if a long peace is priced in.

5. Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- A formal announcement of at least a draft peace deal and MoU is plausible within 24 hours, as indicated by multiple sources. Watch for a joint or sequential Washington–Tehran communication accompanied by statements from key regional capitals.
- Intensive last‑minute bargaining may continue on sequencing: sanctions relief vs. Iranian concessions on proxies, missile programs, and maritime security, with nuclear issues explicitly deferred to a later phase according to the Al‑Jazeera–linked outline.
- Markets will trade the headlines in stages: (1) initial relief rally on risk assets and oil sell‑off; (2) repricing as details emerge on durability, verification, and U.S. domestic political risk to ratification; and (3) sector rotation as investors reassess long‑term Gulf and defense exposures.
- Any breakdown in talks, signaled by a cancellation of Trump’s call, hardline Iranian statements reversing course, or significant new attacks involving U.S. assets, would rapidly invert the market reaction—sending oil sharply higher and reviving safe‑haven demand.

Parallel but secondary development: at 18:02–18:03 UTC [Reports 29, 33], Ukraine claimed successful overnight drone strikes (22–23 May) on Russia’s Novorossiysk naval base, damaging the Kalibr‑armed frigate Admiral Essen, a Bora‑class missile hovercraft, and the nearby Grushovaya Balka oil depot. This is a notable escalation against Black Sea naval and energy infrastructure, with localized implications for Russian naval operations and export logistics, but its global market impact is overshadowed by the potential U.S.–Iran settlement and Hormuz reopening.


**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
High. A credible, near-term U.S.–Iran peace announcement and MoU to end the war and reopen Hormuz would likely trigger a sharp move in crude (initial knee‑jerk down on supply risk relief), rally risk assets in the Middle East, and pressure safe havens (gold, USD) while supporting EM FX and high‑yield credit. The Novorossiysk strike adds upside risk premia back into Black Sea shipping and Russian oil logistics, partly offsetting the downward pressure on global benchmarks.
