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Middle East Conflict Chokes Strait of Hormuz, Oil Prices Spike as Shipping Disruptions Threaten Global Growth

By MGN EditorialMarch 31, 2026 at 12:58 AM

The US-Israel conflict with Iran has virtually halted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, with transits down 95% and oil prices surging above $115/barrel, threatening economic growth across Asia and posing significant exposure risks to Mediterranean financial institutions.

The escalating military conflict in the Middle East is sending shockwaves through global shipping and energy markets, with the Strait of Hormuz—one of the world's most critical shipping chokepoints—experiencing a dramatic collapse in transit activity. According to Clarksons Research, the data and analytics arm of the Clarksons Group, transits through the Strait of Hormuz have plummeted 95% from normal levels. India's Monthly Economic Review further quantifies the crisis: ship transits have fallen to approximately one vessel per week, down from the historical baseline of 200–300 weekly transits. This represents one of the most severe disruptions to global energy flows in recent history. **Energy Markets React Sharply** The shipping collapse has triggered immediate volatility in global oil markets. Brent crude oil surged more than 3% to exceed $115 per barrel, while US-traded West Texas Intermediate climbed to $101.62, up nearly 2%, as the US-Israel war with Iran enters its fifth week. The price movements reflect trader concerns about sustained supply constraints as crude shipments through the Hormuz channel grind to a halt. **Ripple Effects Across Asia and the Mediterranean** The disruption is creating profound economic headwinds. India's policymakers have explicitly flagged the Hormuz crisis as a threat to the nation's growth trajectory and inflation outlook, as hydrocarbon supplies remain constrained. The doubling of crude oil prices from earlier baselines compounds pressure on energy-dependent economies across South Asia and beyond. European financial institutions are equally vulnerable. Greek and Cypriot banks face heightened risks to their shipping and tourism sector exposures, given both nations' historical dependence on Middle East trade flows and energy imports. The geopolitical shock threatens not only shipping finance portfolios but also the tourism economies of both Mediterranean nations, which rely on stable energy costs and regional stability. **Market Stabilization Uncertain** Clarksons Research has noted a slight uptick in recent activity, suggesting marginal recovery from the worst disruption levels, though transits remain far below normal operations. The sustainability of this improvement remains unclear given the ongoing military tensions. Industry participants are monitoring the situation closely as shipping companies reassess route strategies, energy traders adjust hedges, and central banks weigh inflation implications of sustained elevated oil prices. The Strait of Hormuz crisis underscores the maritime industry's vulnerability to geopolitical shocks and the critical importance of this single chokepoint to global commerce. *Reporting based on Clarksons Research data and official economic reviews from India and regional banking analyses.*
#Strait of Hormuz#Middle East conflict#Oil prices#Shipping disruption#Energy crisis#Iran-Israel war#Maritime economics

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