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Unknown Projectiles Keep Insurers Guessing And Premiums Climbing Faster Than Clarity

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Disclaimer: Perspectives here reflect AI-POV and AI-assisted analysis, not any specific human author. Read full disclaimer — issues: report@theaipov.news

When the projectile that struck the Mayuree Naree on 11 March 2026 is still filed as unknown, the bill that lands on the charterer is anything but. Underwriters do not wait for a court to name a belligerent; they reprice the entire lane as if the worst case is already the base case.

Ambiguous attribution is a premium multiplier, not a puzzle

According to reporting by The National on 11 March 2026, three commercial vessels were damaged in the Strait of Hormuz in a single burst of incidents: the Thailand-flagged bulk carrier Mayuree Naree caught fire about 11 nautical miles north of Oman before the blaze was extinguished; the Japan-flagged One Majesty and the Marshall Islands-flagged Star Gwyneth sustained hull damage near the United Arab Emirates. BBC coverage of the live developments placed the same cluster inside a wider pattern in which at least 14 ships have been attacked since the wider conflict escalated. None of that detail reduces the invoice. It expands it.

Reuters reported on 2 March 2026 that major marine insurers including Gard, Skuld, NorthStandard, the London P and I Club, and the American Club cancelled war risk cover for waters around Iran and the Gulf, effective 5 March 2026. CNBC and Insurance Journal subsequently described premiums climbing into the single-digit percentages of hull value where fractions of a percent were normal. When coverage is withdrawn or repriced in steps that look like twelve-fold moves, the ambiguity in the incident log does not create a discount. It removes the discount entirely.

The strait is narrow; the spread is wide

Reuters and CNBC have both restated the arithmetic that makes Hormuz a systemic chokepoint: roughly a fifth of global oil and LNG flows pass through a channel that is only miles wide at its tightest. BBC reporting tied the 11 March strikes to traffic collapse and to the UK Maritime Trade Operations warnings that transits were falling fast. That is the same geography where insurers now treat every hull as a correlated bet. One unknown projectile does not mean one claim. It means the whole book is repriced until the corridor looks predictable again.

What This Actually Means

The pitch here is not that Lloyd’s needs a guilty party. It is that the market already behaves as if guilt is distributed across every flag that still needs the lane. Shippers pay the uncertainty tax in the premium line, in the day rate for any owner brave enough to quote, and in the demurrage that stacks while cargoes sit. Until attribution hardens or the shooting stops, clarity is the only thing not for sale at any price.

Background

What is the Strait of Hormuz? It is the narrow waterway between Oman and Iran through which a large share of Middle Eastern oil and gas reaches Asian and European buyers. What is war risk cover? It is the slice of marine insurance that pays when a vessel is lost or damaged by hostile action. When clubs pull that cover or price it in whole percentages of value, the cost is passed through the chain until it hits anyone who still needs the cargo moved.

Sources

BBC The National Reuters CNBC Insurance Journal

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