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Hormuz Transits Resume, But Capacity Glut Caps Container Rate Rally

By MGN EditorialApril 3, 2026 at 04:57 PM

French and Japanese-owned vessels have made first crossings of the Strait of Hormuz in recent weeks, signaling resumed confidence in the critical waterway, yet container spot rates remain flat as excess global capacity offsets supply-side disruption.

# Hormuz Transits Resume as Shipping Resumes Normal Patterns After a period of heightened caution, shipping operators from major maritime nations have resumed transits through the Strait of Hormuz, with a French-owned container ship and a Japanese-owned tanker making notable crossings in what appear to be the first such passages by vessels from these nations in recent weeks. The resumption of transits by vessels from France and Japan signals a cautious return to normal operating patterns through one of the world's most critical chokepoints, through which approximately one-third of global maritime trade passes. The crossing represents a measure of confidence that conditions in the strategic waterway have stabilized sufficiently for major shipping operators to resume regular service. ## Market Impact Tempered by Oversupply Yet despite the geopolitical implications of normalized Hormuz transits, container spot freight rates on the main east-west trades have largely flatlined this week, according to gCaptain. The resilience of shipping rates has failed to extend beyond recent gains, as excess capacity in the global container fleet continues to suppress pricing pressure. This dynamic reflects a fundamental imbalance in the containership market: while the Hormuz situation creates supply-side uncertainty and potential for route diversification costs, the broader shipping industry remains burdened by overcapacity deployed across major east-west trade corridors. Carriers have deployed record numbers of mega-ships to premium routes, and the supply of container slots continues to exceed uneven demand patterns among shippers. "The capacity glut continues to be the dominant market force," analysts note, with the Hormuz disruption proving insufficient to move the needle on freight rates as long as vessels remain underutilized and competition for cargo remains fierce. ## Competing Market Forces The gap between geopolitical disruption and market pricing underscores a key challenge for the container shipping sector: structural oversupply has become the binding constraint on profitability, regardless of short-term supply shocks. While Hormuz transits returning to normal represents positive news for flow-through logistics, it also means that alternative routing through the Suez Canal or longer circumnavigation routes remain less economically attractive than previously anticipated. For shippers and logistics planners, the message is mixed. Hormuz's return to navigability offers routing optionality and reduces the cost premium of alternative passages. Yet for carriers, it represents a return to baseline competition without the pricing relief that supply-side constraints might otherwise provide. As major trading nations resume normal Hormuz operations, the container market's behavior will provide important signals about the balance between geopolitical risk premiums and the raw economics of overcapacity. For now, the scales remain tipped toward capacity glut.
#container shipping#Strait of Hormuz#freight rates#shipping routes#maritime trade#capacity oversupply

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