Status: No confirmed yuan-settlement transit rule as of Mar 14, 2026
as of March 14, 2026, there is no official confirmation that Iran has imposed a yuan-only settlement condition for tanker passage through the Strait of Hormuz. The scenario has been reported by CNN as under consideration, but neither Iranian nor Chinese authorities have issued a public directive.
Available institutional commentary focuses on navigation safety and the security situation rather than endorsing a payments rule. Any policy shift would carry legal and compliance implications and therefore would typically be communicated through formal channels.
Why it matters: Strait of Hormuz, oil payments in yuan, de-dollarization
A binding requirement to settle oil payments in yuan would sit at the core of de-dollarization debates and could alter risk assessments for shippers and buyers. It would also interact with sanctions-compliance processes and marine insurance coverage.
For broader policy context, U.S. officials have previously warned about the consequences of constraining passage. “A closure would be a ‘terrible mistake’ and ‘economic suicide’ for Iran,” said Marco Rubio, a U.S. senator, in June 2025.
Based on analysis by CSIS, ship-tracking data indicate that no vessels, including Chinese-linked ships, have consistently transited the waterway since early March due to security risks. This suggests any perceived preferential access is not reliably operational at present.
According to Kpler, some vessels near the Strait adjusted AIS identifiers to imply Chinese ties, a move assessed as precautionary rather than confirmation of guaranteed passage. The data point to fragmented, risk-managed behavior rather than a stable transit regime.
According to the Chinese Foreign Ministry, official statements have emphasized de-escalation and safe navigation through the Strait of Hormuz. The messaging addresses maritime security but does not confirm a yuan-settlement condition.
What to watch next and how to validate developments
Signals to monitor: Chinese Foreign Ministry releases, CSIS analysis, Kpler AIS trends
Monitor official diplomatic readouts for any explicit payment-settlement directives. Track updated analytic notes for corroborated shifts in transit patterns. Compare AIS trends to on-the-water developments to confirm any change in passage conditions.
Operational considerations: sanctions compliance, shipping insurance, yuan payment rails
If a yuan-only condition emerges, counterparties would need to reassess sanctions exposure, verify insurer positions on war-risk and liability coverage, and evaluate readiness of yuan settlement channels. Until then, procedures remain governed by existing restrictions.
FAQ about Strait of Hormuz
What has China (including the Chinese Foreign Ministry) said about safe passage and the reported yuan-settlement condition?
The Chinese Foreign Ministry has urged safe navigation. It has not publicly confirmed any yuan-settlement condition as of March 14, 2026.
Are any oil or LNG tankers currently getting through the Strait, and are Chinese-linked vessels receiving preferential treatment?
CSIS reports no consistent transits since early March. Kpler observed some AIS identifiers mimicking Chinese links, which appears precautionary rather than proven preferential access.
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Source: https://coincu.com/markets/brent-steadies-as-hormuz-yuan-for-oil-claim-scrutinized/


