Iran Already Lost: Hormuz Matters Less Every Day

Iran Already Lost: Hormuz Matters Less Every Day

Hormuz matters less every day. For decades, the Iranian regime regarded the Strait of Hormuz as the ultimate choke point of the economy. That story still dominates headlines, but in practice the blackmail power Iran draws from Hormuz is eroding. Trade flows, energy technology, and risk management are changing faster than the inherited narrative.

In reality, almost 80% of the volumes that passed through the Strait have been re-routed or offset by US exports. The United States is the world’s energy superpower as the largest oil and gas producer, posting record oil and natural gas net exports as well as jet fuel and fertilizer international sales. Meanwhile, the Iranian economy depends almost exclusively on the Strait remaining open. 80% of all its exports, 60% of government revenues and 25% of its GDP depend on Strait flows.

The first big blow to the “Hormuz myth” arises from transforming the energy market. The United States has become an exporting superpower in oil, gas, and refined products. Light crude, liquefied natural gas, diesel, and jet fuel are being exported in record volumes from the Gulf Coast and other ports, providing Europe and Asia with a genuine alternative to the barrels that have traditionally relied on the Strait of Hormuz. Additionally, the UAE currently produces 3.6 million barrels per day (bpd) under quotas but holds spare capacity of nearly 4.8 million bpd. This spare capacity can offset almost all of Iran’s production and certainly all of its exports in a short period. When more countries sign long-term contracts with suppliers outside the Middle East, Tehran’s room for threat evaporates. The world has more sources, routes, and flexibility today than in the 1970s, and that translates into less tolerance for political blackmail in the strait, as countries can now diversify their energy supplies and reduce dependency on any single region.

The second change is logistical. Major shipping lines and energy operators have made it clear they are not willing to depend on Iran’s threats. Every recent crisis in Hormuz has been accompanied by route diversions: containers unloaded in alternative ports in the Gulf of Oman or the Red Sea, cargo moving by road or rail within the Arabian Peninsula, and routes stretching around Africa to avoid the highest-risk zones. Major carriers like CMA CGM, MSC, and Maersk are actively rerouting to avoid the Strait of Hormuz, unloading cargo in alternative ports such as Khor Fakkan, Fujairah, or Sohar and sending it onward by feeder ships and trucks, while long-haul services that once ran via Hormuz and Suez are now detouring around the Cape of Good Hope. This “paralysis of navigation” in the strait is forcing a rapid redraw of oil and container routes toward ports outside Hormuz and greater reliance on overland corridors across the Gulf region. It is more expensive, but it is viable and, crucially, it can be planned. When companies design supply chains that assume from the outset that Hormuz is unstable, the strait stops being a “single point of failure” and becomes just another variable in cost and transit time.

The third piece of the puzzle is the network of pipelines that go around the problem. Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and other producers have spent years investing in infrastructure to move crude without passing through Hormuz. Pipelines such as Saudi Arabia’s Petroline, which carries oil from the east to the Red Sea, or the line to Fujairah in the UAE, allow millions of barrels per day to be shipped far from the strait. This does not eliminate Hormuz’s relevance, but it does limit Iran’s ability to “strangle” the market. Every new mile of pipe reduces the strait’s strategic value and shifts power from maritime chokepoints to land-based infrastructure and route diversification.

At the same time, Iran’s behaviour is producing the opposite of what it intends. Every closure threat, every vessel seizure, and every military incident near the strait reinforces the case for getting out of that route faster. Shipping companies suspending calls, insurers pushing up premiums, governments recommending route reconfiguration, and firms redrawing their logistics chains are rational responses to a risk now considered structural, not temporary. The implicit message is devastating for Tehran: the more it uses Hormuz as a weapon, the greater the incentive for the rest of the world to stop needing it.

This process feeds on Iran’s internal crisis. The country suffers chronic inflation, a failed currency, an economic crisis, high unemployment, and a constant drain of human capital. Instead of using energy revenues to diversify its economy and attract investment, the regime has used the oil revenues to maintain a repression machine, funding regional militias and maintaining a confrontational political stance against its potential and current partners. Legal uncertainty and geopolitical hostility combine to make Iran a high-risk and unreliable supplier, exactly the opposite of what customers want in a world where security of supply has become a key factor.

By contrast, the U.S. position is the mirror image. The United States not only produces more oil and gas but also does so in a relatively predictable institutional environment, with the rule of law, large private companies and a deep financing market for infrastructure. Its leadership in refined products, especially jet fuel, and in key inputs such as fertilizers adds another layer of influence: it is not just about supplying energy but also about keeping global transport and agriculture running. Every cargo of LNG, every shipment of jet fuel or fertilizers leaving the U.S. for Europe, Asia, or Latin America reduces the weight of barrels that must transit Hormuz.

None of this means the strait has stopped being important. A significant share of global crude trade still passes through those waters, and a total closure would have immediate effects on prices and risk perception. But the trend is clear: the relative importance of the strait is falling as the market adapts. Global players have decided they cannot let world prosperity depend on the mood of an isolated regime, and they are acting accordingly. Tehran’s blackmail strategy has accelerated exactly the process that most hurts it: the construction of an energy and logistics system that minimizes its ability to do damage.

Hormuz is still on the maps, but every day it weighs a little less in the strategic decisions of governments, shipping lines, and energy traders. The real battle is no longer fought in a few miles of sea but in pipelines, LNG terminals, long‑term contracts, diversification policies, and investment decisions that look decades ahead. On that broader board, the United States and other stable suppliers are gaining ground, while Iran is getting stuck defending an asset whose geopolitical value is depreciating year after year, particularly as alternative energy sources and routes become more viable and competitive in the global market. Hormuz still matters, but it matters less every day.

About Daniel Lacalle

Daniel Lacalle (Madrid, 1967). PhD Economist and Fund Manager. Author of bestsellers "Life In The Financial Markets" and "The Energy World Is Flat" as well as "Escape From the Central Bank Trap". Daniel Lacalle (Madrid, 1967). PhD Economist and Fund Manager. Frequent collaborator with CNBC, Bloomberg, CNN, Hedgeye, Epoch Times, Mises Institute, BBN Times, Wall Street Journal, El Español, A3 Media and 13TV. Holds the CIIA (Certified International Investment Analyst) and masters in Economic Investigation and IESE.

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