(By Oil & Gas 360) – The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz has brought a measure of relief to global energy markets. Tankers are once again moving through the world’s most important energy corridor, crude prices have retreated from their wartime highs, and traders have become increasingly optimistic that the worst of the disruption may be over.That optimism is understandable, but it may also be premature.The market is beginning to discover that reopening a shipping lane is not the same as restoring confidence. The physical flow of oil and liquefied natural gas may be improving, but the risk premium created by months of disruption is likely to remain embedded throughout global energy markets long after the headlines fade.That matters because Hormuz is not simply an oil chokepoint. It is one of the world’s most important natural gas corridors.Roughly one-fifth of globally traded LNG passes through the Strait, with Qatar, the world’s second-largest LNG exporter, relying almost entirely on the Strait of Hormuz to reach customers in Asia and Europe. The United Arab Emirates also exports LNG through the corridor, while neighboring producers depend on the same maritime infrastructure for crude oil, condensates, and refined products.For LNG markets, reliability is often more important than price.Unlike oil, where global cargoes can be rerouted more easily, LNG trade depends on long-term contracts, specialized shipping fleets, regasification terminals, and seasonal demand patterns. Even modest shipping delays can ripple through supply chains, forcing utilities to compete for replacement cargoes while increasing regional price volatility.That is exactly what the market experienced during the Iran conflict.Asian spot LNG prices widened relative to Henry Hub natural gas as buyers competed for available cargoes. European benchmark prices also strengthened as importers sought to secure additional supply ahead of winter storage requirements. Freight costs increased, insurance premiums rose, and shipping schedules became increasingly unpredictable.The result was not simply higher prices.It was wider regional spreads.The premium between Atlantic Basin gas and Asian LNG widened as traders repriced geopolitical risk. Flexible cargoes became more valuable. Storage economics improved. Optionality became a commodity in itself.Those pricing relationships may not immediately return to pre-conflict norms.Markets remember disruption.Energy traders, utilities, and industrial consumers have been reminded that a significant portion of the world’s LNG supply remains concentrated in one narrow waterway. That realization is likely to influence procurement strategies well beyond the current conflict.Some buyers are already diversifying supply portfolios, increasing purchases from the United States, Australia, and Africa to reduce dependence on Middle Eastern cargoes. Others are expanding storage positions or renegotiating contract structures that provide greater delivery flexibility.These changes may outlast the crisis itself.For U.S. LNG exporters, the implications could be particularly significant.Every period of uncertainty surrounding Hormuz reinforces the strategic value of American LNG. Cargoes exported from the Gulf Coast do not eliminate shipping risk, but they diversify global supply and reduce dependence on a single geopolitical chokepoint. That diversification has become increasingly valuable to utilities and governments seeking greater energy security.The same dynamic is reshaping investment decisions.Developers evaluating new LNG export terminals, pipelines, storage facilities, and regasification infrastructure are increasingly incorporating geopolitical resilience into project economics. Energy security is becoming an investment metric alongside cost, efficiency, and emissions.Natural gas itself is also assuming a larger strategic role.Growing electricity demand from artificial intelligence, expanding LNG exports, industrial electrification, and coal-to-gas switching continue supporting long-term consumption. At the same time, geopolitical instability has reminded governments that energy transition strategies must also account for reliability and supply security.This creates an unusual market environment.Near-term prices may soften as Hormuz shipping normalizes and deferred cargoes finally reach their destinations. Some analysts already see temporary oversupply developing as delayed barrels and LNG cargoes arrive simultaneously.Yet beneath that short-term softness, the structural outlook remains more supportive.Inventories in several regions remain below historical comfort levels. Global LNG demand continues expanding. New liquefaction capacity will take time to reach full operation. Electricity demand continues growing, particularly as data centers and AI infrastructure accelerate power consumption.Most importantly, the geopolitical risk has not disappeared.If tensions were to escalate again, markets would likely respond far more quickly than they did during the initial stages of the conflict.Shipping companies now understand the operational risks. Utilities have experienced the consequences of delayed cargoes.Governments have witnessed how quickly energy security can become an economic issue.That institutional memory changes market behavior.The next disruption, even if smaller than the last, could produce a disproportionately larger market response because participants are now far more sensitive to geopolitical risk.For investors, the lesson extends beyond LNG. The Hormuz crisis demonstrated that energy markets no longer trade solely on supply-and-demand fundamentals. They increasingly trade on resilience.Infrastructure redundancy, geographic diversification, storage capacity, shipping flexibility, and secure supply chains are becoming competitive advantages throughout the energy sector.The reopening of Hormuz is undoubtedly positive for global markets, but the biggest legacy of the crisis may not be the disruption itself.It may be the permanent repricing of geopolitical risk across oil, natural gas, LNG, and the infrastructure that connects them.The Strait may be open again, but the market’s confidence is still finding its way home.About Oil & Gas 360 Oil & Gas 360 is an energy-focused news and market intelligence platform delivering analysis, industry developments, and capital markets coverage across the global oil and gas sector. The publication provides timely insight for executives, investors, and energy professionals. Disclaimer This opinion article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment, legal, or financial advice. The views expressed are based on publicly available information and market conditions at the time of publication and are subject to change without notice.