The TD3C MEG-China spot rate for a Very Large Crude Carrier held at $412,888/day on 16 June against a fourth-quarter forward freight agreement (FFA) of $181,163/day, a contango of roughly $231,000/day that the US-Iran memorandum of understanding signed on 18 June left untouched 1. TD3C is the Baltic Exchange benchmark for shipping crude from the Middle East Gulf to China; the FFA is the forward price desks pay to lock freight months ahead. The spot rate measures today's panic. The Q4 FFA measures what the market expects the clean rate to be once any reopening has normalised, and it did not fall when the strait reopened on paper.
Even that forward number carries fear. The 4Q26 FFA sits near $80,000/day above The Atlantic equivalent of roughly $100,000/day for West Africa and US Gulf cargoes to China 2. Lloyd's List frames the Lloyd's Joint War Committee (JWC) Hormuz war-risk designation as something that historically takes years to unwind, and Protection and Indemnity (P&I) cover for a Gulf crossing, the liability insurance no commercial tanker sails without, remains withdrawn 3. BIMCO, the shipping industry's main contract body, advised against starting transits and kept its CONWARTIME war-risk clause triggered 4.
That is the freight desk's read on the diplomatic calendar. Iran re-declared the strait shut on Saturday 20 June, and the Q4 FFA still did not move 5. The scramble for non-Hormuz medium-sour crude that drove the Med Aframax TD19 route to WS228 on 6 June has a forward analogue, and a single memorandum did not close it. For a desk fixing VLCCs into Q4, the $231,000/day gap is the dollar value of the market's disbelief, embedding roughly $0.40 to $0.50 a barrel of freight risk into MEG-China economics the curve expects to persist.
