Citing numerous breaches of the ceasefire, including Israel’s growing military campaign against Hezbollah in Lebanon, Iran’s negotiators declared on Monday that they would stop communicating with the United States through middlemen and that Tehran would take steps to completely close the Strait of Hormuz. Trading floors are put on hold by this kind of announcement. And it did. Within minutes of the report from Iran’s state-affiliated news agency Tasnim, oil prices shot up more than 7%.
Watching this develop has a certain somber rhythm. A few days prior, there was a brief, tentative indication that a deal might actually be reached. A 60-day memorandum of understanding that would have prolonged the ceasefire, opened nuclear negotiations, permitted unrestricted shipping of Hormuz, and included gradual sanctions relief for Iran was being negotiated between the two parties. On Friday, Trump even said on Truth Social that ships in the strait could start returning home. Now, that post seems like it was written a week ago.
| Key Facts: Strait of Hormuz Crisis — June 2026 | |
|---|---|
| Location | Strait of Hormuz, Persian Gulf — 21 miles wide at its narrowest point |
| Daily Oil Flow (Pre-War) | Approx. 20.3 million barrels per day (~20% of global petroleum consumption) |
| LNG Share | Nearly 20% of the world’s seaborne LNG trade transited the strait before the war |
| War Start | February 28, 2026 — U.S. and Israeli forces launched Operation Roaring Lion; Iran imposed blockade within 48 hours |
| Iran’s Announcement (June 1, 2026) | Tasnim News Agency (IRGC-affiliated) reported Iran suspended all indirect negotiations with the U.S. and vowed complete closure of Hormuz |
| Oil Price Reaction | Brent crude surged more than 7% immediately following Monday’s announcement |
| Iran’s Stated Condition | Full Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon; halt to all operations in Lebanon and Gaza |
| Secondary Threat | Iran and the Axis of Resistance also threaten to activate the Bab al-Mandeb Strait as a second chokepoint |
| Fertilizer Impact | Urea prices rose approximately 40% in global markets in April 2026; one-third of global fertilizer passes through Hormuz |
| Rystad Energy Forecast | Oil could reach $180 per barrel by August if re-escalation holds |
It wasn’t the oil terms or the nuclear file that collapsed. Lebanon was the country. This week, Israel extended its war against Hezbollah beyond what Iranian officials deemed permissible under the ceasefire framework, pushing deeper into Lebanese territory than it has in 26 years. The reasoning was straightforward, according to Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi: the agreement was null and void because the Israeli ceasefire in Lebanon was a requirement for the larger ceasefire between Iran and the United States. One could contend that Iran was seeking a way out in any case. This could also have been a real breaking point. The outcome is the same in either case.
According to Tasnim’s report, “no dialogue will take place” until Israel completely leaves Lebanon’s occupied territories and stops all operations in Gaza and Lebanon. In addition, Iran and the Axis of Resistance pledged to pursue full closure of the Strait of Hormuz and to activate other fronts, such as the Bab al-Mandab Strait, which connects the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden. This was something that had never been specifically threatened at this point in the conflict. There are two chokepoints, not just one. That represents a significant increase in the threat’s geometry.

According to the World Bank’s Commodity Markets Outlook, the initial Hormuz disruption caused the biggest oil market shock in history. Global oil production is predicted to drop by 6.9 million barrels per day in the second quarter of 2026, which is the biggest quarterly decline since the COVID-19 pandemic. Any relief the markets had priced in would be eliminated by a complete closure now, following weeks of precarious partial reopening and investor optimism. Earlier this year, Bloomberg Economics analysts cautioned that if prices hit $170 per barrel, the inflationary shock would almost double. This type of stagflationary shock can alter central bank trajectories and, depending on timing, the results of midterm elections.
It’s difficult to ignore the fact that this situation involves more than just financial harm. Beyond energy, the conflict has disrupted important non-oil commodities like graphite, methanol, aluminum, and sulfur, changing global supply chains from minerals that power high-tech industries to fertilizers for harvests the following season. A quarter of the world’s seaborne crude, a fifth of its LNG, and a third of its fertilizer are transported through the strait. Long-term closures do more than just increase fuel prices. It affects bread prices.
Following weeks of sporadic discussions and ongoing kinetic exchanges between Iranian and American forces, negotiations have abruptly stopped, a move that the United States has not formally confirmed. After Iran shot down an American MQ-1 Predator drone flying over international waters, U.S. Central Command attacked radar and drone control locations along the Hormuz coastline over the weekend, citing the attacks as self-defense. As of Monday, both sides are fighting without speaking, or rather, they are fighting and speaking at the same time.
At one in the morning, Trump wrote on Truth Social that Iran “really wants to make a deal” and advised his detractors to “just sit back and relax.” There’s a feeling that the White House is wagering that the current collapse is tactical, a Tehranian pressure tactic rather than a true retreat. That wager might be correct. Since 2011, Iran has made over a dozen threats to close Hormuz, but it has never actually followed through. However, the ceasefire is already in ruins, the strikes have occurred, and the war is actual this time. In a matter of days, it may become evident whether Tehran’s Monday statement is posturing or policy, most likely through oil prices rather than any official statement.
