# [WARNING] US–Iran Near MoU to Reopen Hormuz, Extend Ceasefire

*Sunday, May 24, 2026 at 1:49 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-24T13:49:25.031Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: US-Iran, StraitOfHormuz, Ceasefire, EnergyMarkets, MiddleEast
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/7966.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 13:18 and 13:30 UTC, multiple outlets and regional channels reported that Washington and Tehran have largely negotiated a memorandum of understanding covering a 60‑day ceasefire extension, removal of the Strait of Hormuz blockade and mines, no Iranian tolls, partial sanctions waivers, and a commitment by Iran not to pursue nuclear weapons. If finalized as indicated for announcement on Sunday, this would mark a major de‑escalation of the Gulf conflict and restore security to a critical global energy chokepoint.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

Between 13:18 and 13:32 UTC on 24 May 2026, several reports outlined the emerging terms of a US–Iran memorandum of understanding (MoU):
- Reports 2, 3, and 37 (citing Axios) detail a draft MoU including: a 60‑day ceasefire extension; explicit prohibition on Iranian tolls in the Strait of Hormuz; a requirement that Iran clear mines and lift its blockade first, after which the US would end its own naval blockade; limited US sanctions waivers related to Iran’s oil industry; and a formal Iranian commitment never to pursue nuclear weapons.
- Reports 1, 31, and 32 indicate US officials told Tehran to ignore President Trump’s public outbursts and that the White House hopes remaining differences will be resolved “in the coming hours,” with a deal announcement possible on Sunday.
- Report 14 (Al Jazeera’s Ali Hashem) adds that the final draft reportedly includes: an end to the wider regional conflict “across all fronts, including Lebanon,” unfreezing billions in Iranian assets, removal of the US naval blockade, and reopening Hormuz under an “Iran–US security framework.”
- Report 4 notes that Iran claims 33 vessels have already transited Hormuz in the past 24 hours “in coordination with Tehran,” suggesting an operational de‑escalation underway even before formal signature.
- Report 5 notes Israel’s Prime Minister Netanyahu is convening cabinet discussions on the MoU, underscoring the strategic stakes.

While terms are not yet officially announced, the level of detail, cross‑referencing among outlets, and acknowledgement from both US and Iranian‑adjacent sources indicate a near‑final negotiating stage rather than mere rumor.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

Primary actors:
- United States: The White House and State Department are driving the MoU; reports indicate internal messaging to Iran to discount the US president’s public rhetoric, implying NSC/State are the authoritative negotiating channel.
- Iran: Senior leadership and security establishment, controlling Hormuz mining/blockade operations and regional proxies (notably Hezbollah).
- Israel: The Prime Minister’s Office and security cabinet are urgently assessing implications, particularly with respect to Lebanon and constraints on Iran’s support for Hezbollah.
- Gulf Cooperation Council states and global shipping interests are key stakeholders but not direct signatories.

3. Immediate military/security implications

If implemented as described:
- Strait of Hormuz: A phased but rapid reopening. Iran would begin mine‑clearing and formally lift its blockade, significantly reducing near‑term risk of attacks on shipping. The US would then end its own blockade, likely scaling back high‑intensity naval operations while maintaining a deterrent posture.
- Regional ceasefire: A 60‑day extension across the current conflict front implies reduction in direct US–Iran and proxy clashes, including along Israel–Hezbollah lines. Report 29 suggests Israel will retain latitude for pre‑emptive action to prevent Hezbollah rearmament, indicating this is a managed armistice, not a comprehensive peace.
- Nuclear file: A stated Iranian commitment never to pursue nuclear weapons—if verified and embedded in a broader framework—could underpin follow‑on negotiations, though enforceability and verification mechanisms are not yet described.
- Israeli security calculus: Israel may perceive the text as constraining its freedom of action or locking in a status quo it dislikes in Lebanon. Short‑term friction with Washington is likely and could manifest as political pushback or unilateral kinetic moves if Israel assesses that Hezbollah or Iran are exploiting the pause.

4. Market and economic impact

Energy and shipping:
- Crude oil: Closure or threat to Hormuz is among the highest‑impact geopolitical risks to energy markets. A credible pathway to reopening and de‑mining should remove a significant war premium. Expect prompt futures (Brent, WTI) to sell off on the news and term structure to flatten as near‑term supply disruption risk fades.
- Tanker/shipping: Risk discounts for voyages through the Gulf should compress. Freight rates and insurance premia are likely to adjust rapidly; equities of tanker operators and Gulf‑exposed shipping firms should benefit.
- Iranian oil: Even limited sanctions waivers could add incremental Iranian barrels to the market over the coming months, reinforcing bearish pressure on crude and benefitting importers in Asia and Europe.

Currencies and risk assets:
- GCC FX and sovereign risk: Lower conflict and shipping‑disruption risk should support Gulf sovereign credit, local equities, and reduce CDS spreads.
- Safe havens: Gold and the US dollar may see modest downward pressure as geopolitical risk ebbs, with EM FX and high‑beta equities likely to rally.

5. Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Formal announcement: US officials are signaling a target of Sunday for public rollout; we should expect either a joint or parallel announcement within the next 24–36 hours, or visible signs of delay/complications if talks stall.
- Maritime movements: Increased and more transparent shipping through Hormuz, with US and Iranian naval forces visibly adjusting postures, will be an important confirming indicator. Monitoring AIS patterns, naval NOTAMs, and maritime insurance notices will be critical.
- Israeli response: The Israeli cabinet meeting flagged at 13:27 UTC may produce sharp political statements or conditions. In a worst‑case scenario, Israeli unilateral action in Lebanon or Syria could test or strain the emerging framework.
- Domestic reactions: Hardline elements in Iran and in the US political system may attempt to undermine the deal; public messaging and parliamentary or congressional reactions will shape durability.

Overall, this MoU—if finalized broadly along the reported lines—would be a war‑changing development in the Gulf theater and a major de‑escalation of one of the world’s most systemically important chokepoints.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Expect immediate bullish reaction in risk assets and sharp moves in oil and shipping: crude benchmarks likely to sell off on reduced supply risk, tanker/shipping equities to gain on normalized Hormuz transits, and EM FX in the Gulf to firm. Gold may soften on lower war/closure risk, while Iranian-linked assets (where accessible) could reprice higher on sanctions relief prospects. However, deal fragility and Israeli opposition risk could limit follow-through.
