Latest Market Alert | 23 April 2026
Executive Summary
The Strait of Hormuz crisis has intensified again. Reuters reports Iran seized two ships in the waterway, a third vessel was fired upon but resumed sailing, and the Strait remains effectively shut despite U.S. rhetoric about extending a ceasefire. Brent crude stayed above $100 a barrel in Asian trade.
What Happened
According to Reuters, President Trump said the U.S. was indefinitely calling off attacks to allow diplomacy, but Iranian officials did not clearly accept any extension and instead said a full ceasefire only made sense if the U.S. naval blockade was lifted. Reuters also reported the U.S. military has redirected more than 30 ships and intercepted at least three Iranian-flagged tankers in Asian waters.
Why It Matters Commercially
This is no longer just a geopolitical headline risk. A still-constrained Hormuz means continued exposure across oil, LNG, shipping, freight, marine insurance, refinery inputs and inflation-sensitive supply chains. The physical disruption is persisting even while diplomacy remains unclear.
Likely UK / Client Impact
- Energy and transport cost assumptions remain vulnerable.
- Importers and logistics-heavy firms should not assume quick route normalisation.
- Treasury teams may need to retain higher-for-longer inflation and working-capital pressure scenarios.
- Aviation, haulage, retail and manufacturing remain exposed to renewed price spikes.
Global Commercial Impact
- Oil markets remain highly sensitive to any further seizures or failed talks.
- Shipping through the Gulf remains materially disrupted.
- LNG and container flows continue to face knock-on rerouting and delay risk.
- Inflation pressure could stay elevated if the chokepoint remains constrained.
Our View
This is the clearest sign yet that the market cannot rely on ceasefire language alone. Clients should treat Hormuz as an active operational disruption, not a stabilising story.
Disclaimer
This article has been prepared by Invictus Risk Solutions LLP for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, regulatory, investment, insurance, or financial advice. While sources believed to be reliable have been referenced, no representation or warranty is given as to accuracy or completeness. Market conditions may change rapidly. Readers should seek specific professional advice before acting on any information contained herein. Invictus Risk Solutions LLP accepts no liability for any loss arising from reliance on this material.
