Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
5JUN

Sanctions licence dies in OFAC silence

4 min read
08:43UTC

OFAC let General Licence V expire at 12:01am Eastern on Sunday with no guidance on whether Hengli's refinery restructure clears the 50% ownership test; banks open Monday in the dark.

ConflictAssessed
Key takeaway

A US sanctions exemption on a Chinese refiner lapsed with no guidance, leaving banks to guess their exposure.

OFAC, the US Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control, let General Licence V expire at 12:01am Eastern on Sunday 24 May without publishing any extension, replacement, or guidance 1. The licence, signed on 24 April under Executive Order 13902, had authorised firms to wind down dealings with Hengli Petrochemical's sanctioned Dalian refinery. From Monday's Asia open, any non-US bank clearing dollars for Hengli faces a secondary-sanctions designation of its own.

The silence matters because of a structural question nobody answered. On 21 May, Hengli's Singapore arm transferred 95% of the Dalian refinery to Dalian Changxing, a Chinese state-linked trading house . OFAC's 50% rule treats any entity owned 50% or more by a blocked person as itself blocked. The transfer therefore clears sanctions only if Dalian Changxing is genuinely independent of the Hengli structure; if it is a front, the asset stays blocked and so does every bank that touches its dollars. No bank and no regulator answered that question before the deadline.

The expiry was mechanical, set on 24 April and immovable. The deal Trump declared the same weekend was verbal and contingent . Treasury enforcement and presidential diplomacy ran on the same Sunday without referencing each other, because one answers to a calendar and the other to a Truth Social post. OFAC's refusal to rule before the deadline is itself the enforcement posture: compliance desks must assume exposure and price it in.

Beijing had already moved. China's National Financial Regulatory Administration ordered banks on 1 May to stop new lending to five US-sanctioned refineries, while telling them not to demand repayment of existing credit 2. That order, alongside MOFCOM's Announcement No. 21 blocking statute, shields the same five refiners OFAC has pointedly declined to designate. Asia opens Monday with the legal status of every Hengli dollar trade unresolved, the enforcement clock running, and the promised waivers conditional on a text that does not yet exist.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The US Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) administers America's sanctions programmes, effectively deciding which companies are barred from using US dollars. A rule called the '50% rule' says that if a sanctioned entity owns 50% or more of another company, that company is treated as sanctioned too. In April, OFAC sanctioned Hengli Petrochemical, a large Chinese oil refinery. Three days before a key OFAC deadline expired on 24 May, Hengli's Singapore trading arm transferred 95% of the Dalian refinery to a different Chinese company called Dalian Changxing. Hengli's argument was: we no longer own more than 50% of the refinery, so the new company (Dalian Changxing) should not count as sanctioned. OFAC's deadline expired on 24 May without the bureau clarifying whether it agrees. This matters because any bank clearing US dollars for Hengli or Dalian Changxing now faces potential US penalties from Monday, but nobody knows for certain whether those penalties actually apply. Banks must decide whether to keep processing the trades or freeze them while waiting for clarity that may never come.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

OFAC's General Licence V (GL V) was the only signed Iran instrument of the entire 80-day war. Its 30-day wind-down period ending 24 May was a fixed administrative deadline rather than a policy choice.

The bureau's silence on the Dalian Changxing restructure reflects a structural constraint: issuing a ruling that the restructure is clean would effectively endorse the evasion mechanism and invite its replication across all five NFRA-protected refineries. Issuing a ruling that the restructure is tainted would force a direct confrontation with Beijing at a moment when the Trump-Xi relationship is the primary channel for China's Hormuz-transit diplomacy.

The 95% Dalian Changxing stake is this event's unique load-bearing figure: a Chinese state-linked entity now controls the refinery, OFAC's 50% ownership rule applies automatically to any entity 50%-or-more owned by a blocked person, but 'owned by' requires tracing beneficial ownership through Dalian Changxing back to the original sanctioned structure, which OFAC has not done. Banks must self-assess, with no guidance.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Non-US banks that continue clearing Hengli dollar trades from Monday face live secondary-sanctions exposure with no guidance covering their position. One enforcement action against a major correspondent bank would trigger industry-wide freezing of similar trades.

  • Consequence

    The 95% Dalian Changxing restructure, if accepted de facto by OFAC's silence, becomes a template for all five NFRA-protected refineries to exit the formal sanctions perimeter, hollowing out the Iran energy-sanctions architecture without a single enforcement action.

First Reported In

Update #106 · Trump says deal; OFAC says nothing

US Treasury OFAC· 24 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Israel
Israel
IDF Chief Eyal Zamir declared on 3 June there was no ceasefire for his forces, and strikes killed at least 10 civilians and one Israeli soldier on 4 June. The IDF killed Hezbollah's chief engineer and warned three south Lebanon villages to evacuate on 5 June, advancing into ground the unsigned Washington framework has not caught.
Hezbollah / Lebanon
Hezbollah / Lebanon
Naim Qassem rejected the Washington Lebanon framework on 4 June as "absurd, humiliating and insulting", blocking a ceasefire instrument that required Hezbollah to withdraw north of the Litani before any Israeli withdrawal. Over one million Lebanese remain displaced; the framework's collapse prolongs that toll.
Iran
Iran
Foreign Minister Araghchi publicly coupled the Lebanon ceasefire to the Iran-US nuclear track on 4 June, carrying IRGC authority rather than his own civilian mandate. The IRGC delegation has sent no HEU counter-proposal since Araghchi confirmed no progress that same day; Mojtaba Khamenei's 21 May order to keep the 440.9 kg stockpile inside Iran remains operative.
United States
United States
Rubio placed the Iran-US deal at 95 per cent complete on 4 June while the administration signed no Iran instrument and OFAC designated only Cuban targets. Trump separately disclosed and rejected an airlift plan to collect Iran's HEU stockpile, claiming the material is "entombed", a claim the IAEA cannot verify.
China
China
Beijing's MOFCOM Blocking Rules constrain OFAC enforcement on the mainland; China has not corroborated Trump's verbal account of any bilateral summit, and the rial's failure to hold its Rubio bounce, combined with the IRGC's stablecoin rail closure, increases Chinese yuan-denominated oil-payment exposure through Hormuz.
Bahrain
Bahrain
The IRGC struck Bahrain on 3 June as its sirens sounded and its PAC-3 magazine neared exhaustion; excluded from Rubio's 2 May emergency resupply, Bahrain received a 50-round Federal Register notice on 1 June on an 18-month delivery timeline, meaning it is defending the US Fifth Fleet headquarters on the last rounds it has.