At last, some truly positive tidings regarding crude costs. The United States intends to provide substantial assistance to underwrite and co-insure, essentially pledging to secure, the worth of petroleum shipments traversing the Strait of Hormuz. The swifter and safer the transit of these vessels through the waterway, the more rapidly crude prices will reach their zenith and subsequently recede.
A fleet of 120 tankers remains anchored within Persian Gulf harbors, situated near the strait’s entrance, immobilized due to the fact that Lloyds of London and various other co-insurers have reneged on their agreements and inflated insurance premiums by 50 to 100 percent — assuming they are willing to issue any policy at all — owing to the purported Iranian conflict surcharge.
This predicament is primarily responsible for the escalation of crude costs. A dearth of petroleum does not exist; in fact, the global market is saturated with oil. Considering only the United States, current output stands at 13.6 million barrels daily, and 24 million barrels daily in various oils and liquid energy sources, exceeding the combined production of Russia and Saudi Arabia.
Since the inception of President Trump’s “drill, baby, drill” initiative during his initial tenure, and maintained into his current one, the flow of fossil fuels has been reactivated. Consequently, the United States has transformed into a petroleum exporter, in addition to being the foremost global producer.
Indeed, the U.S. generates almost as much natural gas as the combined output of Russia, Iran, and Communist China, reaching an astonishing 110 billion cubic feet each day. Moreover, a significant aspect of Mr. Trump’s valiant endeavor to conclude Iran’s 47-year-long conflict with America is the impending elimination of the capacity to impede oil supplies in nations such as Iran and Venezuela.
Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent addresses the fresh $20 billion U.S. plan for marine reinsurance, the ongoing dispute in Iran, among other topics, on ‘Kudlow.’
Thus, on this day, the Trump administration declared that the International Development Finance Corporation, acting via Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, possesses a comprehensive execution strategy, endorsed by Mr. Trump, for introducing maritime reinsurance, encompassing war hazard protection, within the Gulf area. The declaration further stated that, “In tight collaboration with” the Central Command, “this initiative is poised to revive trust in oceanic commerce, aid in stabilizing global trade, and provide backing for American and allied enterprises conducting operations in the Middle East amidst the confrontation with Iran.”
This, then, marks a significant progression. Admittedly, the Iranian navy has, in essence, been submerged to the depths of the Persian Gulf seabed. Rendered inconsequential. Certain naysayers genuinely contend that merely two Iranian motorboats, armed with rifles, could scuttle an oil-laden supertanker. I harbor no such conviction whatsoever.
Nonetheless, the formidable United States Navy is poised to assume a pivotal role in this scenario. Conceivably, naval vessels might be stationed at both approaches to Hormuz. Furthermore, additional ships could escort petroleum supertankers during their transit through the passage en route to their designated ports.
Consequently, we would underwrite any financial setbacks and furnish military safeguarding to ensure crude oil reaches its intended terminus.
Global crude prices have fundamentally surged by $30 over the past week due to the war-related hazard surcharge. The precise apex remains uncertain; yet once the United States consolidates this strategy—integrating insurance, naval defense, and numerous vessels traversing the Strait of Hormuz—it will undoubtedly instill reassurance. We shall then be close not merely to a zenith in crude prices, but also to a progressive return to equilibrium, which could approximate $60 per barrel, or possibly the mid-$50 range.
Insignificant Iranian motor vessels will possess no bearing on the matter.

