Oil tankers rerouting around the Iran war — play the Suez Canal boom with Egyptian stocks
With the Strait of Hormuz closed due to the Iran war, oil tankers are being rerouted through Egypt's Suez Canal. Traffic there surged by almost a third in April, driving revenue to its highest level in over two years.
Idea
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz is forcing global shipping traffic to reroute through the Suez Canal, increasing traffic and revenue for Egypt. This unexpected geographic bottleneck translates directly into higher fees and economic activity for the region. Because this is a structural shift forced by an ongoing military conflict, the revenue boost is likely to persist as long as the war does. Egyptian assets, often overlooked by mainstream investors, could see sustained upward pressure as a direct beneficiary of these geopolitical supply chain shifts.