Strait of Hormuz may not fully reopen until second half of 2026, Baker Hughes says
The regional desk in Global has highlighted Strait of Hormuz may not fully reopen until second half of 2026, Baker Hughes says as a priority event, following a series of verified updates from local observers.
Baker Hughes is working under the assumption that the Strait of Hormuz may not fully reopen for months, a senior executive at the influential oilfield services firm said Friday. Baker is assuming in its guidance that the U.S.-Iran conflict continues through the end of June and the strait may not be fully operational until the second half of the year, Chief Financial Officer Ahmed Moghal told investors on the company's first-quarter earnings call. "There's still a great deal of uncertainty regarding, ultimately, the duration and depth of the conflict," Moghal said. Baker is one of the most infuential oilfield drillers in the world with extensive business in the Middle East. The assumption that the strait may not reopen for months is widely shared in the energy industry. Federal Reserve Bank of DallasThe Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas found in a survey of nearly 100 oil and gas executives that nearly 80% believe the strait will not reopen until August or later. More than 80% of executives who responded see future disruptions in the strait as somewhat or very likely, the Dallas Fed Energy survey found. Baker Hughes CEO Lorenzo Simonelli said "geopolitical risk has become a structural reality for oil and gas markets" after the Iran war. The closure of the strait has impacted 10% of global oil volumes and knocked offline 20% of global liquified natural gas (LNG) supplies, Simonelli said. This will likely to result in "persistent risk premiums for oil and LNG prices," the CEO
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