The Strait of Hormuz, nuclear stockpile, and frozen funds dominate high-stakes negotiations
Iran's foreign minister and chief negotiator are in Doha meeting Qatar's prime minister, as Washington and Tehran inch toward a framework agreement to end their three-month war. Both sides are tempering expectations, but the talks are real, and the stakes couldn't be higher.
Key Details
The 14-point memorandum under discussion centers on reopening the Strait of Hormuz in exchange for Iran guaranteeing safe transit through the waterway. Iran's central bank governor joined the delegation to negotiate the release of tens of billions in frozen Iranian oil revenues held in foreign banks.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio described a "pretty solid" proposal on the table - one that would open the strait and launch a time-limited, 60-day negotiation on Iran's nuclear program. Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei confirmed progress on "many topics," but cautioned that signing anything remains far off. Nuclear issues haven't formally entered talks yet.
Iran's state TV reported 32 vessels and five oil tankers transited the strait in the past 24 hours, authorized by Iran's Revolutionary Guards. Before the conflict, 125–140 ships passed through daily. About one-fifth of the world's oil and liquefied gas moves through that corridor.
Market Reaction
Oil prices dropped over 4% to two-week lows on Monday on growing optimism around a potential deal.
Why It Matters for Traders
Any agreement, even a partial one, could trigger sharp moves in oil, energy equities, and regional currencies. The Hormuz standoff has already spiked fuel, fertilizer, and food costs globally.
What to Watch
Whether a framework accord gets signed, and whether nuclear talks formally begin within that 60-day window.
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