Iran has not allowed any liquefied natural gas carrier to transit the Strait of Hormuz for weeks, according to traders involved in the LNG supply chain. The reported restriction is occurring during an ongoing Middle East war context and is framed as a deliberate pressure lever rather than a temporary disruption. Separately, reporting indicates Tehran is treating the maritime chokepoint as an instrument of national sovereignty, including the possibility of monetizing passage after the conflict. The combination of a sustained LNG hold and a political posture of “pay-to-pass” increases the probability of longer-lived supply tightness. Strategically, the Strait of Hormuz remains the primary maritime gateway for regional energy exports, so sustained blockage directly challenges the ability of external powers to stabilize global flows. The articles tie the pressure to an ultimatum associated with U.S. President Donald Trump, implying that Washington is seeking a deal or escalation to compel changes in Iranian behavior. This dynamic shifts bargaining power toward Iran by converting a shared economic asset into a controllable revenue and leverage channel. Meanwhile, downstream importers and shipping stakeholders face the “second-order” costs of rerouting, higher insurance, and delayed cargoes, which can weaken coalition cohesion even without direct kinetic escalation. Market implications are already visible across energy and industrial commodities. Goldman Sachs warned that copper could face further downside if the Strait of Hormuz remains blocked, reflecting expectations of broader economic slowdown and disrupted industrial input flows. In parallel, Asian gas-risk narratives are pushing utilities toward more coal usage, with reports that Italy and Germany are also considering running power plants harder, indicating a potential shift in fuel merit order and emissions profiles. The likely direction of travel is higher LNG and shipping-related costs, wider volatility in base metals, and pressure on equities tied to global growth and industrial demand. What to watch next is whether Iran maintains the LNG transit freeze beyond the current weeks and whether any credible mechanism emerges for “monetized passage” that could partially restore flows. The U.S. deadline referenced in the copper-risk article is a near-term trigger for either negotiations or escalation affecting civilian infrastructure, which would amplify market stress. For energy, monitor LNG spot spreads, tanker routing changes, and insurance premium moves as leading indicators of physical constraints. For metals and macro, track copper futures momentum and revisions to growth expectations, alongside any policy signals from European utilities on coal burn and gas procurement.
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