Washington and Beijing endorse Hormuz access, but no reopening mechanism has emerged
President Trump’s state visit to Beijing on 15 May produced the clearest signal yet that both Washington and Beijing want the Strait of Hormuz reopened. The White House confirmed that Trump and Xi agreed the strait “must remain open to support the free flow of energy,” with Xi offering to help broker a resolution and confirming that China would not supply military equipment to Iran. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi reinforced the message the following day, calling for the waterway to be opened as soon as possible. In practice, however, the summit produced no mechanism for achieving what both sides publicly endorsed. Iran has refused to engage in direct talks with Washington before the US naval blockade is lifted, while analysts note that China may seek concessions on Taiwan before applying meaningful pressure on Tehran.
For shipping markets, the main implication is that the geopolitical risk premium embedded in freight is still not backed by a clear timeline for resolution. A further complication is Iran’s selective reopening of the strait to Chinese-flagged vessels under a separate navigation arrangement, creating a two-tier access framework that adds complexity without restoring commercial normality for the broader market. For tanker and gas carrier owners, the diplomatic developments are directionally positive for sentiment but do not change the physical picture: Hormuz remains constrained, rerouting continues to support tonne-mile demand, and war-risk premiums are unlikely to compress meaningfully until a credible reopening pathway is established. The difference between diplomatic language and operational reality remains the key variable to monitor.