The post-celebratory mood on markets has soured as geopolitical and monetary reality intrudes. With Fed members flirting with further tightening and diplomacy between Tehran and Washington reaching a dead end, the focus shifts to the Strait of Hormuz. Contrary to claims of „free passage,” the waterway has become a bottleneck where Iran’s Revolutionary Guards demand tolls—up to $2 million per VLCC—payable in Yuan or crypto.
For shipowners, this is a legal minefield due to international sanctions. However, the broader threat is the potential collapse of freedom of the seas, a cornerstone of global commerce. If Iran successfully monetizes this chokepoint, it sets a blueprint for others:
- China could demand fees for the Taiwan Strait,
- Yemen could tax the Bab el-Mandeb,
- South Africa could slap tolls on the Cape of Good Hope,
- Chile could do the same at Cabo de Hornos.
This trend would give „free rein” to tolling the world’s seaways, effectively breaking another vital link in the global supply chain and fundamentally altering the economics of international trade.