📰 Breaking: UAE Willing to Join Military Action to Reopen Strait of Hormuz

Source: Bloomberg / The Wall Street Journal, March 31, 2026

This is not just another shipping disruption. It marks a fundamental shift—from logistics crisis to potential military escalation. The UAE, previously a cautious mediator, is now reportedly prepared to join US-led efforts to forcibly reopen the Strait of Hormuz and is lobbying the UN Security Council for authorization.

If this escalates, the steel market will face structural, not temporary, changes.


🔴 How This Changes the Market

FactorCurrent SituationIf Military Action EscalatesMarket Impact
ShippingNearly closed; 200+ vessels backloggedPartial reopening via forceShort‑term volatility; freight may ease after reopening, but war‑risk premiums become permanent
War Risk InsuranceAlready up to 5–10% (normal 0.25%)Could rise further; coverage may be suspended on certain routesInsurance becomes a permanent cost line item
Middle East Steel ImportsEffectively frozen; Chinese mills suspended offersCould worsen further; some orders may be permanently canceledBuyers forced to switch to domestic or alternative sources
Oil PricesBrent ~$113/bblCould spike to $150–200/bbl if conflict widensEnergy costs drive steel production costs higher
Regional Supply ChainsSeverely disruptedLong‑term restructuringTrade flows permanently realigned

💡 What This Means for Steel Buyers & Sellers

For Procurement Managers

MarketAction
UAE / Saudi (East Coast)Stop new orders. Jebel Ali backlogged; conflict risk rising. Source locally or via Jeddah (west coast).
Southeast AsiaLock in Q2–Q3 volumes now. Regional prices are firm at $480–500/t CFR. Iranian supply gap (800k–1.2M t) will tighten further.
IndiaPrioritize domestic. Rupee at record low + freight + war premium = imports uncompetitive.

For Export Sales Managers

  • Middle East: Pause new offers. Wait for clarity. Rerouting via Cape of Good Hope adds 10–15 days and 30% freight.
  • Southeast Asia: Price aggressively. China can capture 1.5–2.0M t of redirected demand.
  • Contracts: Add geopolitical risk clauses. Force majeure is no longer theoretical.

📌 Bottom Line

The UAE’s willingness to join military action changes the nature of the crisis. What was a shipping delay is now a structural shift:

  • Risk premiums are permanent – they will not fully retreat even if the strait reopens
  • Regional markets diverge – Middle East imports may shrink long‑term; Southeast Asia will rely more on China
  • Price floors rise – CFR Southeast Asia will likely settle at $480–500/t, not return to pre‑crisis levels

Procurement strategy must now assume higher costs, longer lead times, and permanent geopolitical premiums.


📧 Need market‑specific Report ? Contact me at amy@amyinsights.com

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