Lloyd's of London, the centuries-old marine insurance market, launched a Chubb-led war-risk consortium on Friday 19 June, offering $200m of hull capacity, $200m of protection-and-indemnity (P&I) cover and $200m of cargo capacity for vessels crossing the Strait of Hormuz, a total of $400m 1. Lloyd's chief of markets Patrick Tiernan said the facility was available to brokers immediately, subject to underwriting and sanctions screening 2. It is the first substantive return of private war-risk capacity since the International Group of P&I Clubs withdrew cover four months ago.
Fresh capacity does not make the water safe. War-risk insurance and navigational safety are separate locks on the same door: Lloyd's reopened the insurance one with $400m, but the channel through Hormuz stays physically shut, its mines uncleared and unswept . Cover now exists for a crossing the strait cannot yet carry, which is why the capacity is a signal of confidence rather than a reopening.
The sanctions-screening condition wires the consortium to an instrument that has not fired. Every covered cargo must already comply with existing US restrictions, so the cover prices the strait off the same Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) waiver the Islamabad memorandum promised and has not delivered , . Brokers can buy the policy; until the channel is swept and the waiver is signed, there is little for it to insure.
