# [WARNING] US–Iran MoU Nears Deal to Reopen Hormuz and Extend Ceasefire

*Sunday, May 24, 2026 at 1:39 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-24T13:39:24.431Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: US, Iran, MiddleEast, StraitOfHormuz, Oil, Naval, Ceasefire, Nuclear
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/7964.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 13:18 and 13:30 UTC, multiple outlets and officials described a U.S.–Iran Memorandum of Understanding as ‘largely negotiated,’ with a 60‑day ceasefire extension, Iranian mine clearance and lifting of its Strait of Hormuz blockade, no Iranian tolls, limited U.S. oil sanctions waivers, and strong commitments on Iran not pursuing nuclear weapons. If concluded, this would sharply reduce near‑term war and energy‑supply risk around a critical global oil chokepoint.

## Detail

1) What happened and confirmed details

From roughly 13:18–13:30 UTC on 24 May 2026, several reports outlined a near‑final Memorandum of Understanding between the United States and Iran:
- Report 32 (13:19:07 UTC) cites Axios quoting a U.S. official that the White House hopes “final differences will be resolved in the coming hours” and that a deal could be announced on Sunday, with a 60‑day framework that can be cut short if Iran is not serious on nuclear talks.
- Report 37 (13:17:14 UTC, cross‑posted at 13:29:07 and 13:29:31 UTC in Reports 2–3) details the MoU terms: a 60‑day ceasefire extension; **no Iranian tolls** on the Strait of Hormuz; Iran to **clear all mines and lift its blockade first**, after which the U.S. would end its own naval blockade; some U.S. **sanctions waivers on Iran’s oil industry**; and a **commitment from Iran to never pursue nuclear weapons.**
- Report 14 (13:28:07 UTC) notes Trump publicly announcing the MoU as “largely negotiated” and Al Jazeera’s Ali Hashem citing an end to regional conflict “across all fronts, including Lebanon,” unfreezing billions in Iranian assets, removal of the U.S. naval blockade, and reopening Hormuz under an “Iran…” framework (text truncated but consistent with a managed regime).
- Report 31 (13:19:18 UTC) adds that U.S. officials privately told Tehran to ignore Trump’s more incendiary public statements as aimed at a domestic audience, signaling Washington’s intent to keep negotiations on track.
- Report 4 (13:28:32 UTC) has Iran stating that 33 vessels have crossed Hormuz in the previous 24 hours in coordination with Tehran, suggesting partial de‑facto easing and a move toward regulated traffic rather than active interdiction.
- Report 5 (13:27:43 UTC) shows Israel’s Prime Minister Netanyahu convening cabinet discussions on the MoU, underscoring regional strategic weight.

While the agreement has not been formally signed or announced, the convergence of Axios, regional outlets, and statements from both Washington and Tehran indicates that the broad contours are accurate and that the probability of conclusion within 24–48 hours is high.

2) Who is involved and chain of command

Key actors:
- **United States**: The White House and State Department are leading negotiations; President Trump has publicly confirmed the MoU is “largely negotiated.” U.S. military forces currently enforcing a naval blockade around the Strait of Hormuz would be the implementing arm for any easing.
- **Iran**: The Iranian government and security establishment, including the IRGC Navy, control mine deployment and maritime security in Hormuz. Their buy‑in is essential for mine clearance and ending the blockade.
- **Regional actors**: Israel is closely monitoring and has convened cabinet discussions, with particular focus on clauses relating to Hezbollah and Lebanon (Report 29 indicates Israel would be allowed pre‑emptive action against Hezbollah rearmament). GCC states, whose energy exports depend on Hormuz, are stakeholders though not primary signatories.

3) Immediate military and security implications

If implemented as described, the MoU would represent a **major de‑escalation** in a crisis that combined:
- Active naval confrontation and mutual blockades in the Strait of Hormuz.
- A risk of broader regional war involving Iran, the U.S., Israel, and Hezbollah.

Key implications:
- **Hormuz security**: Iranian commitment to clear mines and end its blockade, prior to U.S. lifting its own blockade, substantially reduces immediate risk to commercial shipping and naval clashes in one of the world’s most critical maritime chokepoints.
- **Ceasefire extension**: A 60‑day ceasefire extension across “all fronts, including Lebanon” implies a pause or end to active Hezbollah–Israel conflict, reducing the likelihood of missile exchanges impacting Israeli and Lebanese infrastructure.
- **Nuclear file**: A renewed, explicit Iranian commitment not to pursue nuclear weapons, even if lacking full verification details, lowers the near‑term probability of an Israeli or U.S. pre‑emptive strike on Iranian nuclear facilities.
- **Residual risk**: The U.S. has clearly reserved the right to terminate the arrangement early if Iran is deemed unserious. Israeli concern about Hezbollah rearmament could still trigger unilateral Israeli air or drone strikes in Lebanon under the reported pre‑emptive allowances. Spoiler attacks by hard‑line factions on either side remain possible.

4) Market and economic impact

The prospective deal directly affects global energy and shipping:
- **Oil and gas**: Hormuz handles a significant share of global seaborne crude and LNG. A move from mutual blockade to phased reopening and mine clearance is **strongly bearish for near‑term oil and product risk premia**. Front‑month Brent and WTI are likely to fall or underperform the curve as traders price in lower disruption risk. Time spreads could narrow as supply shock fears recede.
- **Iranian crude flows**: Limited U.S. sanctions waivers on Iran’s oil sector and unfreezing of assets point to increased Iranian export volumes over coming months, further weighing on medium‑term crude benchmarks and benefiting Asian refiners and shipping.
- **Shipping**: Tanker and marine insurance risk premia in the Gulf should ease, lifting volume and margins for some tanker operators but potentially compressing war‑risk surcharge income. Port and logistics stocks tied to Gulf traffic may benefit from normalized flows.
- **Defense and security**: U.S. and regional defense equities may see short‑term weakness as worst‑case conflict scenarios are repriced, though any perception that the deal is fragile or front‑loaded could cap the downside.
- **Safe havens and FX**: Gold and other safe‑haven assets (CHF, JPY) may soften as geopolitical urgency fades. Energy‑importer currencies (e.g., INR, EUR, JPY) could gain modestly on reduced oil costs, while sentiment could marginally pressure petrocurrencies (NOK, CAD) and, by perception, GCC‑linked instruments despite formal pegs.

5) Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- **Formal announcement**: A formal joint or parallel announcement is likely within hours to Sunday, per U.S. officials quoted by Axios.
- **Implementation sequencing**: Markets will watch for concrete steps: Iranian mine clearance operations, verification mechanisms, and signals that the U.S. Navy is preparing to ease its blockade once benchmarks are met.
- **Israeli and GCC response**: Israel’s cabinet review will clarify whether Jerusalem endorses or opposes the arrangement, especially regarding Hezbollah. Any visible Israeli criticism or conditions could complicate implementation. GCC states will likely support de‑escalation but may seek assurances over Iran’s future behavior in Hormuz.
- **Domestic political noise**: U.S. domestic debate—evident in Trump’s mixed messaging—could inject volatility but is unlikely to derail the deal in the very short term, given backchannel assurances to Tehran.

Trading and policy desks should monitor for: confirmation of the timeline for mine clearance and blockade removal; specifics on sanctions waivers and volumes; Israeli operational posture toward Lebanon; and any spoilers (attacks on shipping or border incidents) that might be used to justify walking back commitments.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
If finalized, the prospective MoU would ease perceived supply risk in the Strait of Hormuz, likely pressuring crude and refined product prices lower and tightening spreads, while modestly supporting Iranian-linked crude flows and shipping equities. Defense stocks could see some profit-taking on reduced escalation risk, while gold and other safe havens may soften as geopolitical risk premia compress. FX impact would likely be modest but supportive for energy importers’ currencies (e.g., JPY, INR, EUR) and mildly negative for petrocurrencies (e.g., NOK, CAD, some GCC FX via sentiment despite pegs).
