Hormuz Tolls: Re‑price for Partial Deterrence, Not Closure
Source: https://x.com/i/status/2053451601122140204
Observation
From late April through May 9, U.S.–Iran frictions around the Strait of Hormuz escalated alongside new sanctions guidance. On April 28, the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) published FAQ 1249 stating that payments to the Iranian government or the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) for “safe passage” are not authorized for U.S. persons and carry sanctions risk. On May 4, the U.S. launched “Project Freedom” naval escorts; the White House paused the effort on May 5 amid talks. By May 5 the Pentagon said roughly 1,550 commercial vessels with about 22,500 mariners were trapped in the Gulf. On May 8, Treasury sanctioned 10 individuals and companies tied to Iran’s weapons/drone supply chains, while Iranian military‑linked sources warned May 8–9 of heavy responses to any attacks on Iranian ships. Industry advisories (Protection and Indemnity (P&I) clubs; SAFETY4SEA) relayed the OFAC guidance to shipowners and insurers.
The question worth your time: will U.S. secondary sanctions and OFAC’s signals actually stop shipowners and non‑U.S. intermediaries from processing any “toll” payments to Iran — or will alternative rails keep money flowing under cover? The stakes are immediate for energy logistics, P&I markets, and any corporate balance sheet exposed to Gulf shipping costs.
Our call for equity PMs and corporate strategy leads with shipping/insurance exposure: re‑price and hedge for partial deterrence. Assume OFAC raises cost and pries visible U.S.-touchpoint actors offline, but meaningful receipts can still move via non‑U.S. rails unless Treasury publicly targets a small set of critical banks/insurers.
Geoeconomic Structure
A skeptical read starts here: “Secondary sanctions bite hard; no serious bank or insurer will touch Hormuz toll flows. The money stops.” We think that overstates Washington’s leverage and understates the chokepoint mechanics operating under duress.
First, Iran’s position at the physical gate matters. The IRGC and state‑linked authorities have asserted de facto control over transits and threatened retaliation for interference with Iranian vessels. When more than a thousand ships and tens of thousands of mariners are stuck (Pentagon figures), shipowners and charterers face binary choices with collateral costs measured by the hour: wait, reroute via scarce bypass capacity, accept U.S. escort, or comply with local administration to move. That immediacy creates commercial pressure to find a way to pay — or to settle in kind — even as legal risk rises.
Second, OFAC has credibly raised the legal temperature around payments. FAQ 1249 (Apr 28) explicitly warns that “toll” payments to the Iranian government or the IRGC for safe passage are not authorized for U.S. persons and create sanctions risk. The May 8 designations add signaling weight. This will push any intermediary with a U.S. nexus — correspondents, dollar clearers, insurers with Lloyd’s or U.S. exposure — to step back. Expect mainstream P&I clubs and global banks to either exit the lane or demand strong mitigants, pushing up war‑risk premiums and compliance costs.
But the payment problem does not end where the U.S. financial perimeter begins. The practical mechanism that keeps some receipts flowing is the availability of non‑U.S. payment rails and nonstandard settlement: non‑U.S. correspondent banking links, state‑linked channels around China’s small independent “teapot” refineries, ship‑to‑ship and in‑kind arrangements, and potentially crypto as a last‑mile obfuscator. Reuters reporting around the May 8 actions notes Treasury’s explicit warnings touching Chinese‑linked networks — which is precisely where evasion capacity sits. These channels specialize in opacity and can route small‑to‑midsize flows under thresholds that avoid immediate detection, especially when commercial urgency is high and documentation is thin.
Insurance and liability sit as the market enforcers. If Lloyd’s market participants and leading P&I clubs publish formal exclusions or price war‑risk at prohibitive levels, mainstream carriers will not sail — regardless of sanctions law. To date, clubs have issued cautionary advisories aligned with OFAC, not blanket “no‑go” exclusions. That leaves room for a gray fleet — older or state‑linked tonnage operating with limited Western insurance — and other risk‑tolerant owners to move, especially under state or quasi‑state charters, while global names seek escorts or sit out.
Finally, physical hedges cap Iran’s leverage but do not erase it. The Saudi East–West (Petroline) and the UAE’s Habshan–Fujairah corridors can bypass Hormuz to a degree. If sustained throughput rises materially — watch for a month above 3 million barrels per day (mb/d) as a practical indicator — some of the immediate need to pay or pass through Hormuz ebbs. Short of that, Iran’s gatekeeping power keeps transactional pressure alive even as escorts slowly normalize traffic.
Netting these layers: Washington can raise the marginal cost of processing or insuring “toll” payments and knock high‑visibility actors offline. But because the physical chokepoint compels movement and because alternative rails exist, credible, extraterritorial deterrence requires a sharper step — publicly naming a small set of specific non‑U.S. correspondents/insurers and forcing market‑wide cover changes. Absent that, partial deterrence is the base case: fewer, costlier, more concealed payments — not closure.
Nine Star Ki Reading
We apply 九星気学 to the decisive node here — the alternative payment rails outside a U.S. nexus — read as an action: the mechanics that process, conceal, and route value.
The rails align with One White Water (Ippaku Suisei, 一白水星) under the motif “to hide” (隠す). In practical terms: these channels are built to move value quietly, submerged, and out of sight — obfuscation, intermediated hops, and low‑visibility flows are their craft.
Their background is concealment‑first: a quiet, receptive stance that favors shadowed movement over confrontation. What is showing now is the same character operating from North (Kankyū, 坎宮) — active submergence and hard‑to‑detect routing while higher‑risk, visible intermediaries retreat under OFAC pressure. Because the background and current posture are aligned, this reading says the concealment behavior you see is not a bluff; it is the rail’s native mode.
Placement in the cycle matters for the next turn. From North, the next step is toward Northeast (Gonkyū, 艮宮) — a place of stoppage, boundary, and structural choices. Translation to our problem: if regulators or insurers build “walls” by publicly naming a few critical banks/insurers or by formal market exclusions, the fluid, hidden flows are forced into stop/start decisions. Until that wall appears, expect the rails to remain underwater and working.
Recommendations
If you are an equity PM with exposure to tankers, P&I insurers, and Gulf‑levered energy names, re‑price for partial deterrence. Model six to twelve months where escorts gradually normalize transits but non‑U.S. rails keep some “toll” receipts alive under higher friction. Overweight beneficiaries of bypass capacity or state‑backed corridors; underweight balance sheets most sensitive to a step‑function jump in war‑risk or blanket exclusions, unless you also believe Treasury will publicly name a major non‑U.S. bank/insurer.
- OFAC/Treasury designation cadence: a public designation naming at least one major non‑U.S. correspondent bank, P&I club, or insurer within 12 months would shift us toward “strong deterrence.” Monitor OFAC press releases weekly.
- S&P Global Commodities at Sea (CAS) transits through Hormuz: a sustained recovery above 30 transits/day for two consecutive weeks in the next 2–8 weeks, without blanket exclusions, corroborates partial deterrence and functional evasion.
- Lloyd’s/P&I market terms: watch for explicit “Hormuz exclusion” notices or a >10x jump in quoted war‑risk premiums sustained for a month. Either would curtail mainstream traffic and validate a stronger‑deterrence path.
- International Energy Agency (IEA)/Aramco/port throughput: sustained bypass pipeline/terminal throughput above 3 mb/d for a month would blunt Iran’s toll leverage and reduce the relevance of payment‑rail evasion.
Caveats and Open Questions
- If U.S. Treasury publicly designates a major non‑U.S. correspondent bank or a globally relevant insurer/P&I club for processing Hormuz‑linked payments within 12 months, our partial‑deterrence base case tilts toward full deterrence as compliance departments and markets coordinate around the named example.
- If leading P&I clubs and the Lloyd’s market issue formal Hormuz exclusions or impose prohibitive war‑risk premiums, mainstream commercial traffic will stall irrespective of payment‑rail evasion. That would force a re‑rating of exposed equities toward a deeper, longer disruption scenario.
- If Saudi and UAE bypass corridors sustain throughput above 3 mb/d for a month, the economic need to pass Hormuz diminishes, reducing Iran’s leverage and the practical incidence of “toll” demands — again weakening the core mechanism behind our stance.
Three‑choice trigger: which comes first — (1) Treasury publicly names a major non‑U.S. correspondent bank or insurer; (2) Lloyd’s/P&I imposes formal Hormuz exclusions; or (3) CAS shows transits normalizing above 30/day for two weeks? Your positioning should reflect the first mover you judge most likely in the next quarter.