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The Strait of Hormuz Ceasefire Priced In by Markets May Be a Political Fiction

By: Editorial Team, StoneX Media

A cargo freighter fired on by Iranian Revolutionary Guard forces, shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz slowed in response, and food and energy commodity prices fell anyway. That market reaction captures a broad assumption now embedded in commodity pricing: that the ceasefire between the United States and Iran represents a durable shift toward normalized commerce through the strait. The StoneX Commodity Tracker shows twenty-three of twenty-seven tracked markets posting losses over the past month, with food and energy prices giving back the strength built during the peak of U.S.-Iran tensions. Whether that assumption is justified is a separate question from whether markets have already priced it in as settled fact.

Arlan Suderman, StoneX's Senior Commodities Economist, tracks commodity supply chains and energy market dynamics across the Americas and has monitored geopolitical risk across agricultural and energy markets for four decades. In this discussion he analyzes the political logic driving continued Iranian activity in the Strait of Hormuz and why the ceasefire assumption now embedded in commodity prices may prove fragile.

Key Themes from the Discussion

  • Iranian Revolutionary Guard forces fired on a cargo freighter in the Strait of Hormuz and temporarily slowed shipping traffic, yet food and energy commodity markets fell rather than repriced the risk.
  • Iran's leadership sees a political window in President Trump's vulnerability on gas prices ahead of U.S. midterm elections and has structural incentive to keep pressure on the strait.
  • Twenty-three of twenty-seven commodities tracked by StoneX recorded losses in June as markets priced in a normalization of Hormuz commerce that operational evidence does not yet support.

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Iran Exploits U.S. Political Vulnerability to Keep Hormuz Commerce Under Threat

The market's assumption of normalized Hormuz commerce runs directly against the political incentives driving Iranian behavior. Suderman lays out the logic: the Revolutionary Guard is reading the U.S. political calendar with precision. "President Trump really wants to see low gas prices ahead of the midterm elections." The Iranian leadership watched the Senate narrowly fail to pass a resolution that would have required the president to withdraw troops from the region, and in that near-miss they identified political momentum they can work with. If energy prices rise and economic pressure reaches voters, the calculus in Washington shifts, and Iran's leverage grows. The Revolutionary Guard's method of warfare, conducted through proxy groups rather than direct confrontation, allows it to absorb significant military pressure while continuing to operate. He is direct about the conclusion this produces: "They just want to continue to survive for another day." That survival logic, applied to an adversary's election cycle, gives Iran every reason to keep probing U.S. tolerance through November.

Commodity Markets Drop a Risk Premium That Iran Has Not Stopped Earning

The commodity selloff of the past month reflects a decisive philosophical shift in money flow rather than a change in underlying conditions. Food and energy markets had previously built a war premium into prices as Hormuz tensions escalated; that premium is now unwinding on the assumption the ceasefire holds and shipping volumes return to normal. The problem is what the market chose to absorb without repricing: Iranian forces fired on a cargo freighter, traffic through the strait slowed, and futures fell. In Suderman's view, the reaction reveals a market trading an assumption rather than a risk. "The assumption of the marketplace is that all is gonna be well and that we're gonna see commerce flow normally through the Strait of Hormuz, allowing the world economy to restore health once again." The gap between what happened in the strait and how markets responded may be the most important signal in commodity markets right now. When events that would previously have lifted risk premiums are absorbed without reaction, markets have stopped discounting them, not because the risk is gone, but because the narrative has changed.

Hormuz Normalization Remains Elusive as Revolutionary Guard Activity Persists

Suderman has maintained consistent skepticism about the normalization assumption throughout the post-ceasefire period, and the evidence accumulated since has reinforced rather than resolved that position. "I've been skeptical that we'll see a return of commerce to normal levels as the markets have been pricing in," he says, pointing to the gap between the political language of ceasefire and the operational reality of continued Revolutionary Guard activity in the strait. The risk is structurally asymmetric. If normalization proceeds as priced, commodity markets have already captured most of that upside over the past month of selling. If Iranian activity escalates or disrupts traffic for a sustained period, the war premium that unwound over June would have to be rebuilt quickly, with energy markets most directly exposed and grain and oilseed markets affected via production and transport costs. For Suderman, the political logic is clear enough that the outcome is predictable. "They're gonna continue to poke the bear in my view." Markets pricing a settled ceasefire may find that the Revolutionary Guard has a different timetable.

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--- Written by Gus Farrow, Senior Manager, StoneX Media

--- Expert: Arlan Suderman, Senior Commodities Economist, StoneX

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The Strait of Hormuz Ceasefire Priced In by Markets May Be a Political Fiction

Commodity markets are shedding the war premium built during peak Hormuz tensions, but fresh Iranian Revolutionary Guard attacks on shipping suggest the ceasefire assumption now embedded in prices may not hold. StoneX Senior Commodities Economist Arlan Suderman maps the political logic driving continued Iranian provocations and why normalized commerce through the Strait of Hormuz remains far from guaranteed.

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