Traders have seen this movie before: tanker headlines spike Brent, then gravity returns until one incident breaks the complacency script. The difference in March 2026 is that the insurance market exited before price discovery could settle, so the shrug phase may be shorter than in 2019.
2019 showed markets can discount Hormuz until they cannot
After explosions damaged tankers in the Gulf of Oman in June 2019, Brent jumped then gave back most of the move the same session; CSIS and AGSIW both documented that oil markets repeatedly shrugged at Hormuz threats when shale supply and slack demand dominated positioning. Brookings asked why markets were not reacting more to Persian Gulf attacks; the answer then was spare capacity and sentiment anchored on macro, not chokepoint risk.
That precedent matters because it explains why owners and charterers delay reroutes until hulls are hit or cover is pulled. Reuters and CNBC coverage in March 2026 described a different phase: war risk cancellations and premium spikes that force decisions before a single catastrophic casualty registers in spot prices.
A single closure or casualty resets the board
When the strait effectively closed to insured transits, the tanker war history from the 1980s and the 2026 wave of projectile strikes on merchant hulls stopped being academic. gCaptain and wire services reported multiple vessels struck in hours, with crew casualties and fires. That pattern breaks the 2019 complacency because the liability chain snaps at the hull level, not only at the headline level.
CNN live coverage and UKMTO advisories on March 11, 2026, kept the incident stream continuous; insurers and flag states do not price each headline separately—they price the corridor. Once the corridor is rated uninhabitable, the market cannot shrug.
What This Actually Means
History says Hormuz scares often fade. The current break is that fade requires insurable transit, not just lower Brent. Until reinsurance backstops and naval escorts restore cover, the next incident does not need to be larger—it only needs to remind owners that uninsured runs are the alternative. That is when the calm ends for good.