(By Oil & Gas 360) – A fragile ceasefire is holding just enough to steady markets, but not enough to restore confidence.
Diplomatic momentum is building around a broader pause in hostilities. Lebanon has pushed for a temporary ceasefire with Israel to open the door to wider negotiations, a move seen by regional players as a necessary step to prevent further spillover.
But on the ground, the situation tells a different story. Israel has continued large-scale strikes against Hezbollah targets in Lebanon, signaling that the Iran-focused ceasefire does not extend across all fronts.
That disconnect, between diplomacy and military action, is now the defining feature of the current landscape.
At the center of it all is the Strait of Hormuz. Despite political claims that maritime traffic would normalize, shipping activity remains severely constrained.
Vessel movements are limited, insurers remain cautious, and Iran has warned ships to adhere strictly to its directives, effectively asserting control over one of the world’s most critical energy corridors.
Media reports have suggested that Iran might want to charge a toll for ships passing through.
In practical terms, Hormuz is not fully closed, but it is far from open.
That ambiguity is where Iran’s leverage now sits. While Washington has framed the ceasefire as a diplomatic win, analysts increasingly see a different outcome.
Iran has emerged from the conflict bruised economically and militarily, but strategically stronger, retaining its missile capabilities, regional influence, and, most importantly, its ability to influence or restrict flows through Hormuz.
That leverage matters. Roughly 20% of global oil supply moves through the strait. Even partial disruption has immediate consequences for pricing, insurance, and trade flows.
The current environment, where transit is technically possible but operationally uncertain, creates a persistent risk premium in energy markets.
Oil prices have reflected that tension. Initial spikes driven by fears of full disruption have eased on ceasefire headlines, but volatility remains elevated as traders weigh the durability of the agreement against the reality on the water.
Meanwhile, the ceasefire itself remains fragile. Conflicting interpretations of its scope, particularly around Lebanon, continue to undermine trust.
Iran has already signaled it could walk away if Israeli operations continue, while U.S. officials insist the agreement was never intended to cover that front.
Behind the scenes, last-minute diplomacy played a decisive role. Pakistan’s intervention helped keep negotiations alive when talks were close to collapse, underscoring how narrow the path to de-escalation really was.
For energy markets, the takeaway is simple. The crisis has not been resolved, it has been contained.
Hormuz is no longer a binary question of open or closed. It is a controlled corridor, shaped by geopolitical signaling, military positioning, and ongoing negotiation.
That shift alone changes the risk calculus for producers, traders, and investors. In the near term, markets may find some stability as diplomatic efforts continue and partial flows resume.
But structurally, the balance of power has shifted.
Iran now holds a stronger hand at the negotiating table, and a more visible influence over global energy flows.
And until that changes, volatility isn’t going anywhere.
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Disclaimer
This opinion article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment, legal, or financial advice. The views expressed are based on publicly available information and market conditions at the time of publication and are subject to change without notice.





