Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
European Tech Sovereignty
16JUL

Freight rate holds as Brent caves

3 min read
09:32UTC

The TD3C Gulf-to-China tanker rate held its fourth-quarter forward at $181,163 a day on 22 June even as Brent shed roughly 8%, a freight market pricing a recovery in months the flat price has already called complete.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

The TD3C forward curve is pricing a slow physical Hormuz recovery the flat Brent screen has written off.

The TD3C Gulf-to-China route, the Baltic Exchange benchmark for very large crude carriers, held its 4Q26 forward rate at $181,163 a day on Monday 22 June, flat against the 16 June print and again on 19 June , even as Brent shed roughly 8% over the same stretch 1. At twice the Atlantic-basin equivalent, the curve is pricing a Hormuz recovery measured in months.

A forward freight rate that refuses to fall while the flat price drops 8% is the curve pricing the physical reopening constraints, mines uncleared and transit permits still live, that the prompt screen discounts. The geopolitics of the strait belong to the Iran desk; the freight book is ours, and it has not moved on the all-clear.

Western war-risk cover has returned to the strait, but at premiums that add a structural cost floor to every Gulf cargo, an insurance story in its own right. The signal here is the forward curve itself: it is reading the mines and the permits while the flat price is reading the diplomacy. They cannot both hold for long.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Tanker freight rates tell you what it costs to move a large oil shipment by sea. TD3C is the standard measure for moving 270,000 tonnes of crude oil from the Middle East Gulf to China on a very large crude carrier (VLCC, a tanker roughly 340 metres long). Right now, the spot rate for a VLCC sailing today from the Gulf to China is around $412,000 per day. But the rate for a voyage in the last quarter of 2026 (Q4, October to December), traded on a forward contract, is only $181,163 per day. This gap, called a contango, shows the freight market expects Hormuz shipping costs to fall significantly by autumn, but not to fully recover to pre-war levels. At the same time, Brent crude's price fell roughly 8% this week as oil traders priced in more Iranian supply from GL X. The freight rate did not fall at all. This matters because if oil traders were right that normal supply would be flowing again soon, freight rates should also be falling. The freight market's refusal to move suggests tanker operators and insurers see a different timeline: physical barriers like mine clearance and insurance reinstatement will keep Gulf shipping expensive for longer than the oil price is implying.

First Reported In

Update #11 · Crude longs flushed flat into a loaded week

Lloyd's List· 26 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Trump administration
Trump administration
Washington defends the MATCH Act as closing a loophole that lets ASML's DUV tools reach Chinese fabs indirectly, dismissing the Dutch Cabinet's June complaint of being treated with disregard. Officials expect the bill's progress through Congress to keep the DUV cross-subsidy question live regardless of ASML's Q2 numbers.
Bruegel
Bruegel
Brussels-based economists argue this week's deliverables, specialist fab aid and a digital euro that restricts no US firm, prove Europe's sovereignty agenda advances only where it meets no American resistance. They expect the leading-edge fabrication gap and dependence on US frontier AI models to persist absent a policy that directly confronts a named US interest.
German federal government
German federal government
Berlin welcomes the €659m tranche funding jobs across North Rhine-Westphalia, Schleswig-Holstein, Hesse and Bavaria, on top of the ESMC Dresden fab already under construction on TSMC-shipped tooling. Officials treat power and analogue capacity as the achievable near-term win while Dresden remains Germany's only bet on leading-edge logic.
House of Commons Science, Innovation and Technology Committee
House of Commons Science, Innovation and Technology Committee
The committee's 7 July report found the UK has "no coherent strategic framework" for sovereign technology and warns it "risks being cut off at whim", citing the June order that barred foreign access to Anthropic's Fable 5 and Mythos 5 as the trigger case. It expects no domestic hyperscaler or foundry response before the gap widens further.
European Commission
European Commission
The Commission cleared €659m in German state aid on 14 July, taking cumulative Chips Act support to roughly €14.2bn, and let the digital-euro mandate reach trilogue after ECON's floor-vote shortcut was overturned. Brussels presents both as sovereignty delivered, without addressing that neither funds leading-edge logic fabrication.
ASML
ASML
ASML raised FY2026 guidance to €43-45bn on 15 July and, for the first time since Q1, dropped the export-control hedge from its release even with the MATCH Act live in Congress. Fouquet frames the order book, 86 systems against 67 in Q1, as strong enough to outrun the DUV dispute rather than evidence it has cooled.