MarketPR
Early signs that the Strait of Hormuz is moving toward reopening have reduced the most immediate threat to global energy supplies, but analysts warn that the economic damage from the underlying conflict will take months to unwind.
The relief visible in markets following the reopening signals may be running ahead of the fundamental picture.
Those tracking the situation say the toll is already "baked in" — absorbed into supply chains, trade flows, and broader economic conditions regardless of what the waterway does next.
The Reopening Signal and What It Does — and Doesn't — Resolve The early-stage indicators of Hormuz reopening address the acute phase of the crisis: the risk of sustained physical disruption to energy transit at one of the world's most critical chokepoints.
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