
The launch of Project Freedom marked one of the most significant military and economic developments of 2026. On May 4, the United States deployed a major naval and air operation to escort commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz after months of disruption to global oil flows.
Markets reacted immediately. Instead of calming traders, the operation intensified concerns about supply risks, geopolitical escalation, and rising inflation.
Brent crude surged above $114, WTI climbed past $106, and analysts warned that the world’s largest energy supply disruption could continue for months.
For UAE traders, investors, and businesses, the key issue is no longer whether the Strait of Hormuz will reopen — but how long instability will continue to affect oil prices, inflation, and global markets.
Project Freedom is a US-led military mission designed to restore commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz — the world’s most critical oil transit route.
The operation deployed:
The crisis began after the strait was effectively shut down on February 28, 2026. Before the conflict, approximately 120 ships crossed Hormuz every day.
The disruption has already caused historic damage to global energy markets:
Project Freedom was launched to stabilize shipping lanes — but markets quickly questioned whether the operation could truly restore normal oil flows.
Instead of reducing tensions, the launch of Project Freedom coincided with renewed attacks across the region.
Iran targeted the UAE’s Fujairah oil hub with drones and struck an ADNOC-linked vessel shortly after the operation began.
As a result:
The market interpreted the military response as confirmation that the conflict was expanding rather than ending.
Oil prices briefly pulled back after US officials confirmed that a ceasefire framework technically remained in place.
However, the decline was limited:
Despite the temporary relief, prices remained far above pre-conflict levels.
The reason was simple: traders still doubted whether commercial shipping could safely resume through Hormuz.
On the first day of Project Freedom, only four ships successfully crossed the strait under military escort.
Before the war, average daily traffic exceeded 120 vessels.
Analysts from Eurasia Group and Goldman Sachs warned that military escorts alone cannot normalize shipping activity without broader regional cooperation and insurance stability.
Even if the strait fully reopened immediately, clearing the backlog of stranded tankers could take several months.
For oil markets, this means the supply shock is likely to outlast the military conflict itself.
The Hormuz crisis is no longer only an energy story — it is now an inflation story.
April 2026 inflation data confirmed that higher energy costs are feeding directly into the global economy:
For UAE traders and businesses, rising fuel and shipping costs are already impacting operating expenses, transportation, and consumer demand.
One of the biggest contradictions in markets today is that stocks have rallied even while inflation and oil prices remain elevated.
This is fueling growing fears of stagflation.
Stagflation occurs when:
The situation closely resembles the oil shocks of the 1970s, when energy disruptions triggered prolonged inflation and economic weakness simultaneously.
Markets currently believe central banks may eventually cut interest rates to support growth — even if inflation remains above target.
That expectation is helping equities rise despite worsening macroeconomic conditions.
For traders, however, this divergence should be treated cautiously.
A rising stock market during an energy-driven inflation shock is not necessarily a bullish signal. It may instead reflect growing uncertainty about the global economy.
Military escorts cannot fully eliminate threats from:
Shipping companies are still reluctant to re-enter the region because insurance costs and security risks remain extremely high.
Iran immediately accused the US of violating the ceasefire after Project Freedom launched.
Renewed attacks suggest the truce is highly unstable.
Any escalation between the US, Iran, or Israel could quickly trigger another sharp spike in oil prices.
Even in a best-case scenario, clearing stranded shipments and restoring normal export flows will take time.
Kpler estimates that the tanker backlog alone could require roughly three months to resolve.
That means oil prices may remain structurally elevated well beyond the immediate conflict.
Not all analysts are bearish.
A Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas survey found that many oil and gas executives expected the Strait of Hormuz to reopen sooner than markets currently anticipate.
White House adviser Kevin Hassett also expressed confidence that shipping activity could normalize quickly if diplomatic progress accompanies military operations.
If negotiations accelerate and regional tensions ease, oil prices could reverse sharply.
That possibility is why volatility remains extremely high across energy markets.
Just as markets were evaluating Project Freedom, the conflict escalated again.
On May 17, a drone strike targeted the perimeter of the UAE’s Barakah nuclear power plant — the first reported attack involving the facility during the war.
The incident significantly increased concerns across regional markets.
For UAE traders, three developments matter most:
If military escalation continues, oil prices above $100 may eventually appear conservative.
For traders across Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and the wider Gulf region, the coming weeks will likely determine the direction of oil markets for the remainder of 2026.
Key indicators to monitor include:
The biggest risk for traders is reacting emotionally to headlines instead of tracking actual supply recovery.
Project Freedom is an important geopolitical signal — but it is not yet a complete solution to the Hormuz crisis.
The operation demonstrates that the US is committed to reopening the world’s most important oil route. However, military escorts alone cannot instantly restore confidence, normalize shipping, or reverse months of supply disruption.
Oil markets are responding to structural shortages, fragile diplomacy, and ongoing geopolitical risk.
For UAE traders, understanding the difference between headlines and actual supply recovery will be critical in navigating energy markets through the rest of 2026.
Trade the reality — not just the announcement.