Arab News
Arab News,
Thurs, Mar 05, 2026 | Ramadan 15, 1447
US guarantees for Gulf maritime trade ‘doable’ but could take weeks, experts warn
Saudi Arabia:
A pledge by US President Donald Trump to provide insurance and naval escorts for
maritime trade in the Gulf has been welcomed, but with concerns over how long it
would take to come into force.
In a social media post on March 3, the president said the offer will be
available to all shipping lines, and added that “if necessary” the US Navy would
escort tankers through the Strait of Hormuz.
The announcement comes as commercial marine insurers and shipping operators
reassess risk in and around the Gulf in light of the US-Israel war with Iran.
War-risk premiums have surged, and London’s Joint War Committee has expanded the
area it treats as high risk, a move that can increase insurance costs and
complicate coverage for voyages in the region.
Joshua Tallis, a senior research scientist at the Center for Naval Analyzes,
said it was “unlikely” the US Navy would be able to defend commercial vessels
“over the next seven to 10 days,” according to the Financial Times. Escort
missions would probably begin only after “the initial phase of major
hostilities,” he added, once a larger portion of Iran’s anti-ship capabilities
had been degraded.
Mark Montgomery, a retired US Navy rear admiral and former aircraft carrier
strike group commander, said such an operation would be “hard but doable,” but
warned it could take up to two weeks before conditions were suitable for
escorts.
He also said diverting naval assets to convoy protection would likely “cause a
reduction in the amount of strike[s] the US could carry out,” the Financial
Times reported.
Multiple marine insurers have moved to cancel war-risk cover for vessels
operating in Iranian and surrounding Gulf waters, underscoring how difficult it
has become for shipowners to obtain protection at any price.
It remains unclear whether the DFC can quickly and credibly fill the gap. The
agency’s political risk insurance is typically tied to specific investments and
projects and covers threats such as war and terrorism.
Expanding that capacity into broad, transit-linked maritime coverage for “all
shipping lines” would be a significant operational and policy stretch, and
market participants told Reuters they were skeptical that insurance and escorts
alone would be enough to restore flows while fighting continues.
Tobias Maier, CEO of DHL Global Forwarding Middle East and Africa, said some
shipping lines have already begun diverting cargo away from the Strait of Hormuz
as security risks rise.
“Due to safety concerns, several international carriers have halted their
operations in the Strait of Hormuz and are diverting their ships away from the
Gulf,” Maier said in comments to Arab News.
He added that the logistics company has activated contingency plans to maintain
supply chains in the region, including shifting cargo flows through alternative
routes.
“We have activated contingency and mitigation plans, including alternative
routing and multimodal solutions — at this stage focusing on Oman and Saudi
Arabia as gateways into and out of the GCC,” Maier said, adding that “the safety
of our employees and our customers’ cargo as well as maintaining supply chain
continuity where possible are of the utmost importance to us.”
Even if implemented, Trump’s measure is more likely to reduce the cost of risk
than remove the risk itself.
Analysts and shipping sources cited by Reuters said naval escorts would take
time to organize and that US naval resources in the region are not unlimited;
insurers and shipowners also have to weigh missile, drone and mine threats that
can persist despite convoying.
The net effect, industry participants said, could be a partial easing of
war-risk pricing for some voyages, rather than an immediate normalization of
traffic through Hormuz.
Energy markets did not appear to stabilize immediately after Trump’s
announcement.
Brent crude settled up sharply on March 3, and prices rose again on March 4 as
traders focused on the scale of disruptions and ongoing attacks rather than
prospective policy support; Brent was reported around the low-to-mid $80s a
barrel and WTI in the mid-to-high $70s.
Goldman Sachs, in a March 4 note reported by Reuters, raised its near-term
oil-price forecasts and warned that a prolonged disruption of flows through
Hormuz could push Brent toward $100 under some scenarios.
The biggest constraint, traders and shipping executives say, is physical
movement: if tankers refuse to sail or cannot obtain insurance or safe passage,
insurance guarantees alone may not restart volumes.
Insurance withdrawals and cancelations, as well as sharply higher freight rates,
have already disrupted ship scheduling and pushed costs to move crude and
liquefied natural gas higher, amplifying the inflationary impact of the conflict
for importing countries.
Moody’s said the immediate credit impact of the Iran conflict on insurers in the
Gulf Cooperation Council region is likely to be limited if disruptions remain
short-lived, with its baseline scenario assuming the conflict lasts only weeks
and that navigation through the Strait of Hormuz eventually resumes at scale.
Under that scenario, insurers would not face immediate pressure on their credit
profiles. The ratings agency said the primary transmission channel would come
through insurers’ investment portfolios rather than underwriting losses, as
disruptions to oil exports and tourism could weigh on regional asset prices,
particularly real estate and equities.
Moody’s estimates that a 20 percent decline in those asset valuations would
reduce the total equity of rated insurers by around 7 percent, a hit that most
larger companies could absorb due to existing capital buffers. However, risks
would rise if the conflict drags on, potentially weakening premium growth,
increasing competitive pricing pressure and eroding capital cushions across the
sector.