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Days-old Iran ceasefire dies in the Strait of Hormuz as US launches fresh strikes on Iran

The US has begun a fresh series of strikes on Iran, hitting more than 80 targets in and around the Strait of Hormuz only days after the latest patch on the Versailles accord. President Trump now calls the agreement over, even while leaving the door open to talks. Brent trades 6.3% higher and WTI 6.4% higher in response, and the story is no longer any single strike; it is the recursion, a strike-retaliate-re-sign loop that now resets in days rather than months.

The loop runs faster each round

Tehran hit three tankers transiting the strait between Monday and Tuesday; Washington answered by revoking the waiver behind Iranian Oil sales, then followed with a US Central Command (CENTCOM) package officials describe as four to five times larger than the round ten days ago: Air defences, coastal radar, anti-ship missile sites and more than 60 Revolutionary Guard small boats. Israel's Kan reports Washington notified Israel before launching.

Iran's response is arriving on schedule. Nour News says the armed forces will shortly launch a massive attack on US bases across the region, and Tehran separately claims hits on more than 80 US-linked facilities in Bahrain and Kuwait. Explosions are reported near Chabahar and Konarak on the Gulf of Oman coast, with power out across parts of Chabahar, while Iranian sourcing insists the Bushehr nuclear plant took no damage.

The tape is pricing a loop, not a war

Crude's jump is violent in isolation and modest against March, when Iran shut the strait and ran Brent more than 60% above pre-war levels; even after today's move, prices sit far nearer the pre-war tape than the panic highs. Gold tells the same story from the other side, trading almost 1% lower as hawkish Federal Reserve minutes and a firmer Dollar outweigh missiles in the air. The market is treating Hormuz risk as an inflation input rather than a systemic shock, pricing the rerun instead of the finale.

No exit clause

The Versailles accord broke within a week of signature, was patched, and has now failed again inside ten days; every pause buys less time than the last. Nothing in the loop's design stops the next iteration from starting exactly where this one did, in the water between Bandar Abbas and the Omani coast, and nothing yet suggests it will wait long.

Author

Joshua Gibson

Joshua joins the FXStreet team as an Economics and Finance double major from Vancouver Island University with twelve years' experience as an independent trader focusing on technical analysis.

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