BREAKING: IRAN DECLARES STRAIT OF HORMUZ "COMPLETELY OPEN" FOR COMMERCIAL VESSELS • OIL CRASHES 12% • S&P 500, NASDAQ HIT ALL-TIME HIGHS • TRUMP: "THANK YOU!" • U.S. BLOCKADE OF IRANIAN PORTS REMAINS IN EFFECT • GASBUDDY: GAS COULD DROP TO $3.65-$3.85 THIS WEEKEND • JET FUEL FUTURES DOWN 13% • 49-NATION PARIS SUMMIT WELCOMES NEWS • BREAKING: IRAN DECLARES STRAIT OF HORMUZ "COMPLETELY OPEN" FOR COMMERCIAL VESSELS • OIL CRASHES 12% • S&P 500, NASDAQ HIT ALL-TIME HIGHS • TRUMP: "THANK YOU!" • U.S. BLOCKADE OF IRANIAN PORTS REMAINS IN EFFECT • GASBUDDY: GAS COULD DROP TO $3.65-$3.85 THIS WEEKEND • JET FUEL FUTURES DOWN 13% • 49-NATION PARIS SUMMIT WELCOMES NEWS •
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Breaking analysis · Energy markets · Strait of Hormuz · April 2026

Oil Crashes 12% After Iran Opens Hormuz — But Is the Strait Really Open? | IranWarRoom.com

Oil plunged 12% after Iran declared Hormuz open. Gas could drop to $3.65. But mines remain, only 10% of ships are moving, and the ceasefire expires in 5 days.

Published

By Sarah Brennan

Iran's foreign minister just made the announcement the world has been waiting seven weeks to hear.

"The passage for all commercial vessels through Strait of Hormuz is declared completely open for the remaining period of ceasefire, on the coordinated route," Abbas Araghchi wrote on X on Friday morning. He said the move was linked to the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire that took effect Thursday night.

Within minutes, markets moved. Oil crashed. Stocks surged. And President Trump posted on Truth Social: "IRAN HAS JUST ANNOUNCED THAT THE STRAIT OF IRAN IS FULLY OPEN AND READY FOR FULL PASSAGE. THANK YOU!"

Then came a second Trump post, in all caps: "THE NAVAL BLOCKADE WILL REMAIN IN FULL FORCE AND EFFECT AS IT PERTAINS TO IRAN, ONLY, UNTIL SUCH TIME AS OUR TRANSACTION WITH IRAN IS 100% COMPLETE."

So the strait is open. But the blockade stays. And the gap between those two things is where the real story lives.

To be clear about what has and has not changed: the announcement is new. The market reaction is new. But the underlying problems — mines in the water, war risk insurance at crisis levels, damaged infrastructure, depleted fuel reserves across Europe and Asia — have not changed in the last 12 hours. A declaration does not clear a minefield. A tweet does not refuel an airport.

-12%
U.S. Crude Oil (WTI)
-11%
Brent Crude
-13%
Jet Fuel Futures
ATH
S&P 500 + Nasdaq

What the Markets Did

The market reaction was instant and dramatic. U.S. crude oil plunged about 12% to roughly $83 per barrel. International Brent crude fell more than 11% to around $88. Heating oil futures, which serve as a proxy for jet fuel, dropped 13%. Wholesale gasoline futures fell 7%.

On the other side of the trade, stocks surged. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite both opened at new all-time highs. European markets rallied too, with the Stoxx 600 up 1.2% and French and German indexes jumping more than 2%.

GasBuddy analyst Patrick De Haan said the shift could quickly reach American drivers. He estimated gas prices could fall below $4 per gallon to around $3.65 to $3.85 starting this weekend. The national average on Friday morning was already $4.09, down from $4.13 earlier in the week.

Why Stocks Go Up When Oil Goes Down

If you are wondering why stocks hit all-time highs on the same day oil crashed, the logic is straightforward. Cheaper oil means lower costs for airlines, shipping companies, manufacturers, and retailers. Lower costs mean higher profits. Higher profits mean higher stock prices. For the broader economy, cheaper energy means consumers spend less on gas and heating and have more money for everything else. That is why Wall Street cheered a development that oil traders did not.

Why Your Gas Price Will Not Drop 12% Tomorrow

There is a well-known pattern in gas pricing that economists call "rockets and feathers." When oil prices go up, gas prices shoot up fast, like a rocket. When oil prices come down, gas prices drift down slowly, like a feather. Refiners, distributors, and station owners adjust prices on the way down more gradually than on the way up. So even though oil dropped 12% today, do not expect gas to drop 12% this weekend. De Haan's estimate of $3.65 to $3.85 reflects a gradual decline over coming days, not an overnight crash. If you filled up yesterday at $4.09, you may save 20 to 30 cents a gallon by next week, not 50 cents tomorrow.

What Iran Actually Said

The fine print matters. Iran did not say the strait is unconditionally open. Araghchi said ships must use a "coordinated route" announced by Iran's Ports and Maritime Organisation. The opening applies only "for the remaining period of ceasefire." And it was framed as linked to the Lebanon ceasefire, not to a broader peace deal.

What is not clear: whether ships will have to pay a toll. Before the blockade, Iran was charging up to $2 million per ship to transit the strait. If the "coordinated route" includes fees, this is not a reopening in any normal sense. It is a tollbooth.

The EU's top diplomat, Kaja Kallas, immediately flagged this. "Under international law, transit through waterways like the Strait of Hormuz must remain open and free of charge," she wrote. "Any pay-for-passage scheme will set a dangerous precedent for global maritime routes."

What the Shipping Data Actually Shows

This is where the announcement and the reality diverge sharply.

Reality Check: The Strait by the Numbers

Pre-war daily average: ~60 commercial ships per day through the strait, carrying about 21 million barrels of oil.

Current daily average: About 6 ships per day. Goldman Sachs puts average flows at 2.1 million barrels — roughly 10% of normal.

Prediction markets: Only 26% odds that Hormuz traffic fully normalizes by April 30.

Mine status: Iran laid about a dozen mines. U.S. mine clearance began April 11. Experts say clearing could take 2-3 weeks. One report says Iran lost track of some of its own mines.

Insurance: War risk premiums have not normalized. Shipowners do not re-enter mined waterways because of a social media post. They re-enter when insurers say it is safe.

Yahoo Finance summed up the disconnect: "Shipowners don't re-enter the Strait of Hormuz because a social media post says it's open. They re-enter when war risk insurance premiums normalize, when mine-clearance is verified, and when the legal and logistical chain that governs a $20 trillion annual oil market has had time to reset."

Strait of Hormuz: Announcement vs. Reality
Factor What Was Announced What the Data Shows
Strait status "Completely open" ~10% of normal traffic flowing
Tolls / fees "Coordinated route" (unclear) Iran was charging up to $2M/ship
Mines Not addressed ~12 mines laid; clearance ongoing
War risk insurance Not addressed Still "extremely high risk"
Duration "Remaining period of ceasefire" Ceasefire expires ~April 22
U.S. blockade Not affected Remains "in full force" on Iran
Normalization timeline Immediate 26% odds by April 30 (prediction mkts)

The 110 Tankers That Will Tell Us If This Is Real

Right now, more than 110 oil-laden tankers and over 15 carriers loaded with liquefied natural gas are sitting in the Persian Gulf, waiting. They have been trapped behind the strait for weeks. If Iran's announcement is genuine, those ships should start moving. If they do not, the declaration is diplomatic positioning, not a real reopening.

The first major commercial tanker to transit the strait after this announcement will be the real signal. Not the tweet. Not the Truth Social post. Not the foreign minister's X post. A ship, loaded with oil, moving through the water and arriving safely on the other side. Until that happens, the announcement is a promise, not a fact.

What This Means for Flights

Jet fuel futures dropped 13% on the news. That is a big number. But it does not fix the flight cancellation crisis overnight.

Yesterday, the head of the International Energy Agency said Europe has "maybe six weeks" of jet fuel left. About 75% of Europe's jet fuel imports come from the Middle East, and none have come through the strait since the war began. SAS has already cancelled 1,000 flights. KLM is cutting 160 in May. Lufthansa shut down an entire subsidiary.

Even if tankers start moving today, the IEA and industry analysts say jet fuel supply chains could take months to fully recover. Refineries need time to ramp up. Ships need time to transit. Airports need time to restock. Airlines have no visibility on what their fuel supply will look like in July. If you have summer travel to or within Europe booked, this is encouraging news, but it is not a reason to cancel your travel insurance.

The 49-Nation Summit That Got Upstaged

Iran's announcement dropped while 49 countries were gathered at a summit in Paris specifically to address the Hormuz crisis. French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer were leading the meeting when the news broke.

Macron cautiously welcomed the announcement but said the strait needs to be secured by "a neutral and independent party." He announced a planning meeting in London next week to set up a multinational mission to protect merchant ships. Starmer was more direct: "The Strait should be reopened immediately with no tolls and no restrictions."

The timing was likely not a coincidence. Iran's declaration put it on the front foot diplomatically, positioning Tehran as the party opening the strait while the U.S. maintains a blockade. Whether ships actually start flowing is a separate question entirely.

What Happens Next

Three things to watch in the next five days:

1. Does shipping actually resume? The announcement means nothing if tankers do not start moving. Watch the daily transit count. If it stays near 6 per day instead of climbing toward 60, the announcement is political theater.

2. The ceasefire deadline. The two-week ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran expires around April 21-22. Iran's opening applies only "for the remaining period of ceasefire." If no deal is reached, the strait could close again in less than a week.

3. The toll question. If Iran's "coordinated route" includes fees, expect immediate pushback from the EU, the U.S., and shipping insurers. A $2 million toll is not an open strait. It is a shakedown with better branding.

Trump said negotiations "SHOULD GO VERY QUICKLY IN THAT MOST OF THE POINTS ARE ALREADY NEGOTIATED." That may be true. It may also be the same kind of optimism that preceded the failed Islamabad talks five days ago.

What Does This Mean for You

If you drive to work: Gas prices should start falling this weekend, but slowly. Expect a drop of about 20 to 30 cents per gallon over the next week, not an overnight crash. Gas goes up like a rocket and comes down like a feather. If you can wait a few days to fill up, you will save a little. Use apps like GasBuddy to find the cheapest stations near you. But if the ceasefire collapses next week, prices could spike right back up.

If you have summer flights booked in Europe: Today's news is hopeful but not a guarantee. Jet fuel supply chains take months to recover. Airlines still do not know how much fuel they will have in July. Keep flexible or refundable tickets. Do not cancel travel insurance. Watch for airline announcements in the next two to three weeks as carriers reassess their summer schedules.

If you have domestic U.S. flights booked: You are in better shape. The U.S. produces its own fuel, so supply is not the problem, cost is. Ticket prices may ease slightly as fuel surcharges come down, but do not expect airlines to roll back the bag fee increases. Those are likely permanent.

If you are an investor: Markets priced in optimism today. The S&P and Nasdaq hit all-time highs. But this is a trade on hope, not confirmation. The ceasefire expires in five days. If talks fail, oil could reverse sharply. Energy stocks, airline stocks, and shipping stocks will be the most volatile in either direction. The prediction market gives only 26% odds the strait fully normalizes by April 30.

If you run a small business: Do not adjust shipping contracts or pricing based on one day's oil move. The USPS fuel surcharge, the FedEx surcharge, and the UPS surcharge are all still in effect and none have announced plans to roll them back. Wait for sustained price declines over two to three weeks before making changes to your cost structure.

The one thing everyone should watch: The ceasefire expiration around April 21-22. Everything depends on whether a deal gets signed in the next five days. If it does, this could be the turning point. If it does not, today's oil drop may be a head fake.

"The ceasefire and the open strait are not the same thing. Washington appears to be conflating them." Yahoo Finance Analysis, April 17, 2026

For now, the market has priced in hope. Oil is down 12%. Gas may drop this weekend. That is real relief for real people. But whether it lasts depends on whether ships start moving, mines get cleared, and a deal gets signed — all before a five-day clock runs out.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Strait of Hormuz actually open?
Iran declared it open on April 17. But shipping data shows only about 10% of normal traffic. Mines remain in the water, war risk insurance is still at crisis levels, and ships must use a "coordinated route" set by Iran. Full normalization could take weeks.
How much did oil prices drop?
U.S. crude (WTI) plunged about 12% to around $83/barrel. Brent crude fell 11% to about $88. Jet fuel futures dropped 13%. Wholesale gas futures fell 7%. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq both hit new all-time highs.
Will gas prices drop now?
Likely yes, at least short-term. GasBuddy's analyst estimated gas could fall to $3.65-$3.85/gallon starting this weekend. The national average was already down to $4.09 on Friday morning. But sustained drops depend on whether the strait stays open.
Is the U.S. blockade of Iran still active?
Yes. Trump said it stays "in full force" until a deal is complete. The blockade targets ships going to or from Iranian ports. Other traffic through the strait is not affected.
Are there still mines in the strait?
Yes. Iran laid about a dozen. The U.S. Navy began clearance on April 11 using destroyers and underwater drones. Experts say it could take 2-3 weeks. One report says Iran lost track of some of its own mines.
When does the ceasefire expire?
Around April 21-22. Iran's strait opening only applies "for the remaining period of ceasefire." If no deal is reached, the strait could close again within days.
Why won't gas prices drop 12% like oil did?
Gas prices follow a pattern called "rockets and feathers." They shoot up fast when oil rises but drift down slowly when oil falls. Expect a gradual decline of 20 to 30 cents per gallon over the coming week, not an overnight crash matching the oil drop.
Does this fix the European flight cancellation crisis?
Not immediately. Even if tankers start moving today, the IEA says jet fuel supply chains could take months to recover. Europe has only about 6 weeks of jet fuel left. Airlines still do not know their fuel supply for July. Keep flexible tickets and travel insurance for European summer travel.
Why did stocks go up when oil crashed?
Cheaper oil means lower costs for airlines, shipping, manufacturers, and retailers. Lower costs mean higher corporate profits, which drives stock prices up. For the broader economy, cheaper energy also means consumers have more money to spend on everything else.
How will we know if the strait is really open?
Watch the ships. Over 110 oil tankers and 15 LNG carriers are stuck in the Persian Gulf. If they start transiting the strait in large numbers, it is real. If daily crossings stay near 6 instead of climbing back toward the pre-war average of 60, the announcement is political theater.

Sources

NBC News — Oil prices plunge 10% after Iran says Strait of Hormuz is open. April 17, 2026. https://www.nbcnews.com/business/markets/oil-prices-plunge-stocks-jump-hormuz-open-iran-war-rcna332321
NBC News — Live updates: Iran declares Strait of Hormuz 'completely open.' April 17, 2026. https://www.nbcnews.com/world/iran/live-blog/live-updates-israel-lebanon-ceasefire-trump-iran-talks-hormuz-summit-rcna332294
Yahoo Finance — Trump Declares The Strait Is 'Permanently' Open -- Tanker Traffic Says 'Not Yet.' April 17, 2026. https://finance.yahoo.com/sectors/energy/articles/trump-declares-strait-permanently-open-023105335.html
CNBC — Brent oil price near "00 with U.S.-Iran talks uncertain and Hormuz still blocked. April 16, 2026. https://www.cnbc.com/2026/04/16/iran-war-oil-price-strait-hormuz.html
Military Times — How the US military could clear mines from the Strait of Hormuz. April 16, 2026. https://www.militarytimes.com/news/your-military/2026/04/16/how-the-us-military-could-clear-mines-from-the-strait-of-hormuz/
Wikipedia — 2026 Strait of Hormuz crisis. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Strait_of_Hormuz_crisis
Fox News — Trump says Israel, Lebanon agree to 10-day ceasefire. April 16, 2026. https://www.foxnews.com/live-news/trump-us-iran-war-strait-hormuz-blockade-israel-oil-prices-april-16
April 17, 202610 min read
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