Russia and Iran are close to finalising a trade agreement that would cover natural gas supplies, according to reports, even as the United States keeps pressure on Tehran and asserts control over one of the world's most critical shipping lanes.
The deal, if completed, would mark a significant deepening of economic ties between Moscow and Tehran. Both countries face heavy Western sanctions, and a formal energy trade agreement would give each side a more reliable partner outside the dollar-based financial system. For Russia, it opens a potential new export channel. For Iran, it means access to Russian energy infrastructure and, potentially, a more stable revenue stream at a time when its own oil exports face constant US-led pressure.
Trump Asserts Strait of Hormuz Is Open
US President Donald Trump stated that the Strait of Hormuz is open, pushing back against any suggestion that the waterway has been disrupted. The strait sits between Iran and Oman, and roughly 20 percent of the world's seaborne oil passes through it. Any credible threat to that corridor moves global energy prices almost immediately, which is why Trump's statement carries deliberate market and diplomatic weight.
Trump also used the moment to criticise Iran again, consistent with his administration's ongoing pressure campaign. The combination, asserting the strait is open while simultaneously attacking Tehran, is a signal aimed at both energy markets and US allies watching the standoff closely.
Why the Russia-Iran Deal Matters for Energy Markets
A formalised Russia-Iran gas agreement would create a sanctioned-economy energy corridor that bypasses Western financial infrastructure entirely. That matters for global markets in two ways. First, it reduces the leverage Western sanctions have over either country individually, since each becomes a fallback supplier or buyer for the other. Second, it could redirect Russian gas volumes that might otherwise compete for European or Asian buyers, affecting pricing dynamics in those markets.
Iran holds some of the largest proven natural gas reserves in the world. Russia is the largest natural gas exporter. A structured bilateral deal between the two would represent a concentration of supply-side power outside Western oversight, even if the volumes involved in an initial agreement remain modest.
For oil markets specifically, the Hormuz angle is the more immediate variable. If the strait remains open and traffic flows normally, the near-term supply shock risk stays low. But the political temperature between Washington and Tehran remains high, and any escalation could reprice that risk quickly. Trump's assertion that the strait is open is partly intended to calm that risk premium in energy markets.
India, which imports significant volumes of oil from the Gulf region and has maintained trade ties with both Russia and Iran despite Western pressure, sits at an interesting intersection of these dynamics. A deeper Russia-Iran energy relationship could affect the availability and pricing of energy supplies that flow toward South and Southeast Asia, including Indian refiners who have navigated sanctions-era procurement carefully.
The broader picture is one of accelerating realignment in global energy trade. The Russia-Ukraine war pushed Russia to pivot its energy exports eastward. Sanctions on Iran have pushed Tehran toward non-Western trading partners. A bilateral gas deal would formalise what has already been happening informally, turning ad hoc workarounds into a structured commercial relationship.
What to watch next: whether the Russia-Iran agreement is signed, what volumes and pricing terms it covers, and whether Trump escalates rhetoric or action toward Iran in a way that puts Hormuz traffic back in focus for energy traders.