Citrini Research sent an analyst to the Strait of Hormuz. Here’s what they found.

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Citrini Research sent an analyst to the Strait of Hormuz. Here’s what they found.

Citrini Research — the financial research publication that gained attention in February for its Doomsday AI report — sent an analyst to the Strait of Hormuz to report on conditions underground. Its report may not close the strait when pricing the market.

According to videos posted on the Citrini Research substack page and X, the analyst, dubbed “Analyst #3,” visited the Straits in March and discovered that the satellite- and ship-tracking data relied on by the market were undercounting the “dark fleet” of vessels operating in the area.

The report was quoted as saying that the ships falsified their location data and changed their ownership designations to hide their movements through Iran’s tolling system and ensure their safety.

According to Citrini’s findings, the market has lost a large portion of Iranian-directed shipping traffic through the strait.

Read more: What an extended war with Iran could mean for gas prices

Going into Strait, “we thought we’d basically leave the impression that ‘Straight was closed or open,'” Citrini wrote in the public section of its client report. “We were also aware that this trip could be a flop and we would learn nothing.”

“There was no shortage of alpha in the strait, including concrete information on the new rules, written as we speak, about how the Iranian Revolutionary Guard is deciding who can and can’t pass,” the report said.

Citrini Research said its on-the-ground analyst is “now safe and sound in the free world.”

Oil prices popped at the open of futures trading on Sunday before normalizing overnight. At 11:15 am ET Monday, international benchmark Brent crude (BZ=F) rose 0.4% to $109 a barrel, while U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude (CL=F) futures rose 0.4% to $112 a barrel.

The latest data from Bloomberg Intelligence shows that over the weekend, 21 ships transited the Strait of Hormuz, marking the highest volume of traffic through the critical waterway since the war began. While most of those ships were Iranian, according to Bloomberg oil strategist Julian Lee, ships from China, Japan and Iraq, among other countries that have agreed to Iran’s tolling regime, have also passed through.

“In practical terms, passage through the Strait of Hormuz is increasingly dependent on Iranian bargaining terms and tolerance,” JPMorgan Chase commodity strategists wrote in a client note on Monday.

“If nation-states make side arrangements to secure safe transit, it is an admission that Iran retains meaningful control over one of the world’s central energy arteries,” they added. “If more countries cut safe passage agreements with Iran for their tankers, Iran will benefit.”

Oil exports through the Strait of Hormuz are well below normal, according to Goldman Sachs data. · Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research

While Citrini’s detailed findings have not been shared with the public, several parts of the analyst report have been widely circulated. In one, the analyst points out that the drones “didn’t seem to differentiate well between a non-compliant tanker and a forty-year-old dinghy” in the strait and interacted with smuggling vessels.

“So I figured, if I’m here, I might as well go for it,” the analyst reportedly wrote. “I jumped into the water and swam. Cigarette in my mouth. Martyrs above.”

“Then the smuggling boats started to run past … and then one of them turned around and was pulled directly towards us at high speed from the direction of Iran,” read an excerpt. “For five seconds I was sure it was over. The Emirati in the barrel – 72 pieces – was the only thing in my head.

“Turns out, it wasn’t the IRGC. Just another smuggler … He held out his cigarette and I gave him mine, and we looked at each other across the gap between two boats in the middle of the most disputed waterway on Earth, and we nodded, and we smiled, and neither of us said a word.”

This handout photo taken on March 11, 2026 and released by the Royal Thai Navy shows smoke billowing from the Thai bulk carrier 'Mayuri Nari' near the Strait of Hormuz after an attack. (Handout/Royal Thai Navy/AFP via Getty Images)
This handout photo taken on March 11, 2026 and released by the Royal Thai Navy shows smoke billowing from the Thai bulk carrier ‘Mayuri Nari’ near the Strait of Hormuz after an attack. (Handout/Royal Thai Navy/AFP via Getty Images) · Handout via Getty Images

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