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.
