“For centuries, London has dominated maritime insurance. From Lloyd’s markets to global reinsurance. That means: When London decides the risk is too high…Global shipping freezes”
Everyone thinks Iran can close the Strait of Hormuz.
That’s wrong.
Iran didn’t close it.
London did.
Not the government.
Insurance companies.
The most important oil artery in the world nearly stopped flowing.
Let me explain.
Every day, about 107 cargo ships normally pass through it.
Energy lifelines for the global economy.
Last week?
Only 19 ships crossed.
An 81% collapse in traffic.
No missiles.
Just one decision:
Insurance companies withdrew coverage.
Here’s how global shipping really works.
About 90% of the world’s ships are insured by 12 maritime insurance clubs.
These clubs rely on reinsurance markets — mostly based in London.
When war risk rises…
Reinsurers can pull coverage.
And when that happens:
No insurance
→ ships cannot sail
→ trade stops.
A $150M tanker will not move without insurance.
So the Strait of Hormuz wasn’t blocked by a navy.
It was blocked by a spreadsheet.
Now the real question:
Who is actually being choked?
Three players.
1. Iran
Almost all Iranian oil exports leave through Hormuz.
If shipping collapses:
Iran cannot export.
Its war revenue disappears.
Ironically, the oil weapon hurts Iran itself first.
2. China
China is the most exposed country on earth to Hormuz disruption.
* ~40% of Chinese crude imports pass through the strait
* ~90% of Iranian oil exports go to China
* Qatar LNG shipments to China must cross Hormuz
So if this route freezes…
China’s energy security starts shaking.
That’s why Beijing quickly urged de-escalation.
3.The entire Gulf
Saudi Arabia
UAE
Qatar
Kuwait
Iraq
Their oil exports depend on it.
Hormuz carries ~20 million barrels/day.
There is no alternative route.
And here’s where the British financial system quietly enters the story.
For centuries, London has dominated maritime insurance.
From Lloyd’s markets to global reinsurance.
That means:
When London decides the risk is too high…
Global shipping freezes.
No blockade required.
Does this help Russia?
Short term — yes.
If Gulf exports slow:
* Oil prices rise
* Russian crude become valuable
* Asia may buy more Russian oil
Higher prices mean more money for Moscow.
What about India?
India imports ~85% of its oil.
Much of it comes from the Middle East.
If Hormuz disruption continues:
* Shipping costs rise
* Oil prices spike
* Inflation pressure increases
India’s advantage is diversification.
It buys from:
* Gulf producers
* Russia
* Other suppliers
But if Hormuz stays unstable…
everyone pays more.
The biggest lesson here?
Most people think geopolitics is controlled by:
Presidents
Generals.
Missiles.
But sometimes…
The real gatekeepers are actuaries running risk models in London.
They don’t fire weapons.
They price probability.
And when the numbers don’t work…
global trade simply stops.
If you want to understand modern geopolitics, remember this:
*The world is no longer controlled only by governments.
It’s controlled by systems.
Insurance systems.
Energy systems.
Financial systems.
Missiles create headlines.
Risk models decide what actually moves.
