GERMANY (MAR) GERMAN PPI (MOM) ACTUAL: 2.5% VS -0.5% PREVIOUS;EST 1.4%...
Stocks, Bonds Fall as Oil Jumps After Hormuz Chaos: Markets Wrap
Oil Prices Rebound Amid Renewed Tensions and Ceasefire Deadline
Iran Affirms Security of Strait of Hormuz Transit
FTSE 100 today: Stocks slip on rising Middle East tensions, oil rebound
German industry faces stagnation in 2026, BDI says
Asteroid Shiba (ASTEROID) Explodes 920% After Musk Confirms SpaceX Mascot Status
Saxo Sees 'Confusion' Reigning in Oil Markets (Video)
ORIENT SECURITIES BUYOUT TO CREATE US$85B BROKERAGE AMID CONSOLIDATION PUSH-ft...
Economist Mark Zandi Puts A Price On The Iran War: $21 Billion In Higher Gas Costs For Americans
China’s Silver Imports Jump to Record on Retail and Solar Demand
Middle East crisis: Oil rebounds as Iran threatens to retaliate for US attack on cargo ship
Chevron (CVX) Stock: Falls on Crude Selloff as Gulf Shipping Tensions Return
According to Vedomosti, Iran’s envoy in Moscow has denied claims that Russia is providing...
William Hill Owner Evoke in Takeover Talks With Bally’s Intralot
Japanese 20-Year Government Bond Yield Declines
Bitcoin Shows Resilience as U.S.-Iran Tensions Drive Oil Prices Higher and Stocks Lower
'Head-In-The-Sand Delusional:' Investor Gary Black Warns Tesla May Not Capture Robotaxi Demand Despite Scaling Push
European shares set to open lower as hopes for US-Iran peace fade
Japan stocks higher at close of trade; Nikkei 225 up 0.69%
German producer prices fall 0.2% in March, beat forecasts
Saudi Energy and Acwa to spend $3bn on Mecca power plant
Iranian envoy in Moscow states that national unity has strengthened and resolve remains firm,...
Tesla (TSLA) Stock: Expands Robotaxi Service to Dallas and Houston Amid Safety Scrutiny
Iranian envoy in Moscow claims that recent U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran did not achieve their...
Ethereum (ETH) Price Falls 8% Amid Geopolitical Tensions — Key Support Zones to Monitor
XRP Sees $1.08B in ETF Assets While Solana wXRP Launch Triggers Security Concerns
Palantir (PLTR) Stock: Slides After Controversial 22-Point Ideology Post Sparks Debate on AI and Defense Role
Horizons Middle East & Africa 4/20/2026 (Video)
Hedge Funds Turn Bullish on Cotton for First Time in Two Years
Oman-UAE rail network is 40% complete
Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) Stock: Advances with 1.4nm Breakthrough and Strong AI Demand
Nxera Pharma Secures $10 Million Milestone Payment from AbbVie
TD Cowen Lowers BP Price Target by $2
Raytheon Scheduled to Report Earnings This Tuesday
Israel's Military Issues Warning to Civilians Near Litani River and Wadi Saluki
German producer prices fall 0.2% y/y in March
Oman plans $1bn in food self-sufficiency projects this year
Aldar to build 9,000 ‘affordable’ units for leasing in Abu Dhabi
State Street Corp sees its price target lifted to $175 by KBW, up from $157....
UniCredit Urges Commerzbank Overhaul as It Steps Up Pursuit
Israel’s military cautions civilians against nearing the Litani River, Wadi Saluki, and surrounding...
Google (GOOGL) Stock: Advances Custom AI Chips in Talks with Marvell Technology
Fermi Inc. Announces "Fermi 2.0" Strategic Evolution, New Board Chairman, Leadership Transitions, and New Office Locations
German Producer Prices Experience Significant Increase in March
Tencent Partners with Kaspi.kz in Major Investment Deal
Intuitive Surgical Set to Report Q1 Earnings
Regeneron Expands Dupixent Indications and Partners with Telix Pharmaceuticals
Danaher Set to Release Q1 Earnings Report
Trickle of ships pass through Hormuz under Iran’s gaze
- Omani, French and Japanese vessels
- No ships with US or Israeli links
- Traffic rerouting north of Larak
A handful of ships have begun passing through the Strait of Hormuz under tightly controlled conditions with passage so far limited to vessels without clear US or Israeli links.
Three Omani-operated tankers, a French-owned container ship and a Japanese-linked gas carrier, have crossed the Strait of Hormuz since April 1, according to shipping data.
A ship signalling its destination as “India ship India crew” and a Panama-flagged very large gas carrier also left the Gulf through the chokepoint heading for China last Friday, Reuters reported.
The Omani-linked vessels – two very large crude carriers and a liquefied natural gas (LNG) carrier – appeared to enter the waterway by hugging their home coastline rather than taking the northern Iranian-controlled route used by most vessels in recent weeks.
Last Thursday, Iran said it was drafting a protocol with Muscat to monitor traffic through the strait. Oman has not publicly confirmed any such arrangement or explained how passage is being agreed.
A tanker carrying Iraqi crude made its way through the strait on Sunday, Bloomberg reported, after Iran said it would grant an exemption to “brotherly Iraq”.
No ships with US or Israeli links are known to have transited.
Oman mediated pre-war talks between Iran and the US and criticised the strikes when they began. It has sought to stay neutral during the conflict but has not escaped the fallout, with drones striking Duqm port early in the war.
The French-owned vessel changed its Automatic Identification System (AIS) destination to “Owner France” before entering Iranian waters. Reuters reported it was sailing south along Oman’s coast after the crossing.
The Japanese-linked gas carrier also crossed, though its route was unclear after tracking signals disappeared during transit.
Larak, sparsely populated and close to one of the narrowest stretches of the strait, has become one of the most sensitive points in the waterway.
Maritime traffic has been rerouting north of the island through an “Iran-approved corridor”. Lloyd’s List described the northern corridor as a “Tehran toll booth”, saying it traced dozens of vessels using it from March 13 and reporting that some operators paid fees of up to $2 million for safe passage.
Iran shut the narrow sea lane – which carries about a fifth of global oil and LNG flows – after US and Israeli strikes at the end of February widened into a broader conflict.
There have been more than two dozen incidents in the Gulf, from ships being sunk to vessels set ablaze. At least a dozen merchant mariners have been killed.
A small number of Greek, Maltese, Indian and China-linked vessels were allowed through the strait last month. The apparent use of a southern coastal route by the Omani-linked tankers would mark a notable departure from that pattern.
Tracking movements remain difficult because ships often switch off AIS transponders during crossings and because of signal jamming and spoofing in the area.
Further reading:
- The Hormuz shipping crisis in numbers
- Iran operating shipping ‘toll booth’ north of Larak Island
- Hormuz disruption reshapes bunker shipping fuel flows
Iranian-linked tankers – including ships tied to Tehran’s so-called shadow fleet – have continued lifting crude from Kharg Island, 650km northwest of the strait.
Saleem Khan, chief data and analytics officer at Pole Star Global, a maritime intelligence firm, said several vessels had broadcast unusual AIS locations as a political signal.
“Some ships leaving the region are broadcasting extraordinary ‘destinations’ such as ‘China Owner and All Crew’, turning what should be a navigational field into a live political message: don’t shoot, we’re not your target.”
Source: AGBI