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CENTCOM redirections rise to 52, pace slows

4 min read
17:09UTC

CENTCOM's Hormuz vessel-redirection count rose from 44 on 1 May to 52 by 7 May; the daily pace has slowed materially while Brent's rebound priced the missiles, not the steadier blockade.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Eight more redirections in a week, but Brent moved on one night of missiles, not on the trend line.

CENTCOM's vessel-redirection count rose from 44 on 1 May to 52 by 7 May, an increase of eight redirections across the week . The pace has slowed materially. Earlier in the campaign, between roughly Days 60 and 62, CENTCOM was logging five redirections every two days. The 1-7 May window worked out to roughly two redirections every three days. CENTCOM is still tagging vessels in the strait, but the surge phase that ran into Day 62 has passed.

CENTCOM uses the redirection count as the cleanest single quantitative metric of operational tempo. Every redirection is a vessel ordered to change course, hold position outside the strait, or accept a CENTCOM escort. The figure compresses cumulative friction into a number that tracks weekly. The slowing pace, in isolation, would suggest a normalising chokepoint: traffic adapts, owners accept the delay, the system reaches a steady state.

Brent Crude did not read it that way. Brent's 8 May rebound followed the night of kinetic exchange in Hormuz, not the redirection count. Three days of price losses going into 7 May had reflected the MOU's progress through Pakistan; one night of kinetic action reversed all of it. The market is pricing the spikes, not the floor.

CENTCOM's redirection trend pointed one way; the Brent reversal pointed the other. Continuous infrastructure does not move oil prices once it is priced in. Kinetic events do, especially when they involve named US Navy assets in the strait that gives the benchmark its name. The blockade has settled into the background; the IRGC strike on the destroyers has not.

For producers and refiners in the United Kingdom, the practical reading is that pump prices will track the next missile, not the next redirection. Brent has now sat above the $100 mark long enough to feed through to forecourt repricing on its normal lag, and a sustained triple-digit Brent environment translates to roughly 10-12p per litre over the pre-war baseline. The next downward break in Brent will require either a signed instrument, rather than a paper one before Tehran's 9 May expiry, or a clean week without further exchanges of fire in the strait.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The US military has been tracking how many ships it has turned away from the Strait of Hormuz since it started blocking vessels bound for Iran. That count reached 52 by 7 May, up from 44 a week earlier. But the rate at which ships are being turned away has slowed down noticeably compared to the opening weeks. The reason: most ships that were going to change course already have; the ones still trying to pass through either have Iranian permission or are willing to pay the toll. Meanwhile, oil prices react more sharply to the headline news of missiles being fired than to the slower-moving redirection count.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The deceleration from five per 48 hours to two per 72 hours signals CENTCOM has shifted to a maintenance-rate interdiction posture that is sustainable for months without additional fleet deployment, removing the time-pressure that might have accelerated Iranian compliance.

  • Risk

    If oil markets continue pricing kinetic spikes rather than the redirection baseline, the next exchange of fire in the strait will produce another $1-3 Brent spike regardless of the underlying redirection trend, amplifying energy-price volatility for UK consumers and businesses.

First Reported In

Update #91 · MOU in Tehran, missiles in the strait

CENTCOM· 8 May 2026
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