- The American media's disclosure of the Hormuz blockade tactics centers on "air power first," with the P-8 Poseidon, E-2 Hawkeye, and a drone fleet forming the forward system for surveillance, early warning, and maritime target strikes.
- A more certain signal on the surface is that the United States has initiated a maritime blockade targeting "entry and exit from Iranian ports," yet Hormuz has not completely shut down, with a small number of non-Iranian oil tankers still passing through.
- In the market, oil prices fell back after breaking through $100 per barrel; as of April 14, Brent crude was quoted at about $99, indicating that traders are still pricing between "blockade escalation risks" and "diplomatic easing expectations."
Start with “Tactic Disclosure” to Understand Market Reading
The key to this news is not just the word "blockade," but the specifics of the blockade method. The structure disclosed by The Atlantic represents a typical sea-air integrated suppression: first gaining reconnaissance and cover advantages with aerial platforms, followed by maritime forces executing monitoring, interception, and even boarding inspections. For the market, this means the risk is no longer at the level of political rhetoric but is entering an executable, sustainable, and upgradeable military framework. The combination of the P-8 and E-2, in particular, indicates that the U.S. is not focused on a one-time strike but rather on continuous situational awareness of the waterways and air-sea coordination.
Shipping and Oil Flows Are Not “Zero,” But Entering Layered Passage
According to Reuters, this round of blockade focuses on "shipping related to Iranian ports" and does not equate to a complete closure of the Strait of Hormuz to all vessels. The report on April 14 indicates that relevant tankers from Malaysia, China, India, Pakistan, and Thailand are still crossing, suggesting that the shipping market is entering a new stage of "permitted passage, political coordination, and insurance repricing," rather than a single, comprehensive disruption. This difference is crucial: it determines that oil prices are more likely to exhibit high volatility premiums rather than uncontrolled unilateral movements.
Immediate Link between Crude Oil, Inflation, and Risk Assets
Hormuz typically handles about one-fifth of global oil and gas exports, and any sustainable blockade would first impact inflation expectations through energy prices, then transmit to bond yields, exchange rates, and stock valuations. On April 13, oil prices temporarily exceeded $100, but by around the Asian session on April 14, Brent had returned to about $99, indicating the market is betting that the blockade's enforcement strength may still be constrained by diplomatic negotiations. On the same day, Reuters quoted the IEA stating that the current Middle East conflict has already reduced global supply by about 1.5 million barrels per day by 2026 and downgraded the original demand growth forecast to a slight demand decline. This implies that if the blockade becomes further institutionalized, the main market trading theme will shift from "short-term geopolitical shocks" to "mid-term stagflation repricing."
Next Observation Points in Trading
The next key observations should not focus on a single media disclosure but rather on three types of high-frequency signals: first, whether there is more confirmation of public deployments of carrier strike groups or land-based air forces; second, whether the number of non-Iranian vessel transits continues to shrink; third, whether Brent can effectively stand back above $100 and maintain it. If these three factors simultaneously intensify, the market will adjust the current event from a "local blockade" to a "systemic disruption of energy supply." If negotiations resume and transit cases increase, the risk premium on oil prices may be temporarily retracted.




