- U.S. President Donald Trump has explicitly rejected Iran's counterproposal for a ceasefire, putting the preliminary ceasefire agreement, which was set to take effect in early April, at high risk of collapse. This has ushered the geopolitical game in the Middle East into a new stalemate.
- The substantial blockade of the Strait of Hormuz continues, with only a few oil tankers passing through this week. Due to the expected supply-side disruptions, Brent crude oil futures prices broke through the $104.50 per barrel mark during Asian trading sessions.
- The U.S. government has imposed a new round of sanctions on entities suspected of assisting Iran in oil trade, aiming to cut off its financial chain. Against the backdrop of NATO allies' reservations about joint escort missions, the upcoming high-level U.S.-China meeting could become a crucial point for reshaping expectations of the oil supply chain.
Blockade of the Strait of Hormuz and Reassessment of Oil Pricing
The marginal deterioration of geopolitics is rapidly transmitting to the commodity markets. Due to Iran's demands in negotiations, which include a comprehensive ceasefire, lifting of the maritime blockade, and war reparations, the expectation gap between the U.S. and Iran has significantly widened. This diplomatic stalemate has directly led to the navigation rate of the global core energy channel, the Strait of Hormuz, dropping to a freezing point. According to tracking data from the London Stock Exchange Group, only three fully loaded oil tankers have recently passed through the area with their transponders turned off. This physical blockade, combined with the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries' production dropping to a twenty-year low in April, has injected a high geopolitical risk premium into the short-term pricing model of Brent crude oil. If the obstruction of navigation becomes normalized, the global oil spot market's supply-demand balance sheet will face substantial restructuring.
Macro Sanctions and Escalation of Geopolitical Games
Beyond military deterrence, financial and trade sanctions form another core axis of the current game. Washington has announced targeted sanctions against individuals and companies assisting Iran's oil exports, intending to tighten Tehran's fiscal revenue space by pressuring secondary market participants. This move not only increases the compliance costs of global energy trade but also sends a clear compliance warning to financial institutions involved in related cross-border settlements. As Trump is about to arrive in Beijing, the market is highly focused on whether energy security and geopolitical sanctions will become core topics of the bilateral talks. If the U.S. and China can reach some understanding on maintaining regional energy supply stability, it may somewhat mitigate the current market's severe volatility expectations.
Allied Coordination and Domestic Political Games
On the international multilateral coordination front, the U.S. government faces significant resistance. Core NATO member states, lacking comprehensive United Nations authorization, have shown a cautious attitude towards deploying naval forces to intervene in the strait escort. Communication between U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and the foreign ministers of the UK and Australia has yet to form a substantive joint intervention plan. Meanwhile, the domestic public opinion base in the U.S. also poses a constraint on further overseas intervention. Related polls show that up to two-thirds of respondents doubt the clarity of current policy goals. This dual political pressure, both internally and externally, forces the U.S. government to find an extremely narrow balance between maintaining the stability of the petrodollar system and avoiding long-term military entanglement when formulating the next Middle East strategy.