Fitch Says Hormuz Closure Expected to Be Short-Lived

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(MENAFN) Fitch Ratings assessed Wednesday that the Strait of Hormuz’s closure is expected to be short-lived, with the resulting impact on global oil prices likely to remain contained.

The credit rating agency pointed to a prevailing oversupply in global oil markets as a key cushion against geopolitical shocks, arguing it would cap the price premium typically triggered by major supply disruptions.

Fitch projects the regional conflict will conclude within a month, anticipating that interruptions to shipping lanes and energy infrastructure will prove brief. The agency noted that elevated inventory levels and available alternative routes should help absorb the near-term supply shock.

The Strait of Hormuz remains one of the world’s most critical energy arteries, with roughly 20 million barrels of oil and refined products — equivalent to one-fifth of global daily supply — transiting the waterway each day.

Brent crude has already climbed more than 10%, breaching the $80-per-barrel threshold since last week. However, Fitch anticipates prices will stabilize as market buffers take effect.

The report drew a clear divide among regional economies. Saudi Arabia and Türkiye hold sufficient reserves and assets to weather the disruption, while Iraq, Kuwait, and Qatar face sharper near-term exposure given their heavy dependence on the route for exports.

Fitch also flagged longer-term sovereign rating risks across the Middle East should hostilities drag on, singling out Israel and the UAE — both of which have already had negative qualitative overlays applied to their rating models.

Beyond the Middle East, the ripple effects cut in opposing directions: upstream oil producers in Australia and Malaysia stand to gain from elevated prices, while downstream industries — particularly chemicals and fertilizers — face mounting margin pressure as feedstock costs rise.

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