Hormuz Reopens but It's Not Actually Normal Yet
The Strait of Hormuz reopened Friday under a 10-day Lebanon ceasefire agreement. Oil prices dropped. Analysts called it bullish. Then nothing changed for the people actually moving containers through Montreal docks.
Here's the gap between the headline and dock reality: a partial reopening is not the same as restored capacity. Iran says vessels can transit. Shipowners are watching to see if that guarantee lasts past day 11. U.S. sanctions on Iranian shipping haven't lifted. European insurers and flag-state authorities are still nervous. The result is predictable—carriers are running minimal vessels through Hormuz, rerouting others around the Cape, and charging premium rates for anything that does go through the Strait.
For a 3PL Montreal near me handling Asia-to-Canada imports, that means the pressure on lead times doesn't ease yet.
What Partial Reopening Actually Means at the Dock
Before the Hormuz tensions, a standard container from Shanghai to Montreal took 30–35 days via Suez and the Strait. The premium routing around the Cape added 10–14 days and roughly $400–600 per container in fuel surcharges and extended demurrage.
Right now, most carriers are still deploying Cape routes or holding vessels in Middle East anchorages waiting for political clarity. Even with the ceasefire announcement, a carrier does not redirect a 20,000 TEU mega-ship through Hormuz on speculation. They need 5–7 days of confidence that the corridor stays open, which we don't have in a 10-day window. By the time enough carriers feel safe enough to redeploy to Hormuz, the ceasefire could be over.
What you're seeing instead: vessel cascades, blank sailings to consolidate cargo on fewer ships, and carriers pushing demurrage and detention charges downstream onto importers and forwarders. At Montreal sufferance warehouse operations, we've watched drayage windows compress and port congestion spike because importers are holding cargo longer—waiting for cheaper, more certain sailings that aren't coming yet.
The Real Impact: Extended Transit and Higher Holding Costs
A 10-day ceasefire doesn't reset 60+ days of route displacement. Even if Hormuz fully reopens today, carriers have repositioned their fleets. Vessels that should have arrived in Montreal in late November are now scheduled for mid-December, rerouted around Africa. Shippers booked on those sailings are experiencing real delays—not speculative ones.
The downstream effect hits bonded and sufferance warehouses hard. Importers are extending storage dates, paying demurrage to carriers on vessels that haven't arrived, and then paying in-bond handling on cargo that's sitting longer than planned. At FENGYE LOGISTICS, we've seen average dwell times stretch from 5–7 days to 12–15 days for Asian import consolidations since October.
That costs money. A standard 40-foot container in a Montreal warehouse costs roughly $60–80 per day in bonded storage. If your shipment spends an extra week in limbo due to carrier rerouting, that's $420–560 before you even break it down and move it to retail distribution.
Why This Isn't Over When the Ceasefire Ends
The market is pricing in risk. Until U.S. pressure on Iranian shipping eases—which is not happening under current policy—insurers and flag states will treat Hormuz transits as elevated risk. That means higher premiums, more selective carrier participation, and persistent delays.
If the ceasefire collapses on day 11, we're back to rerouting overnight. Carriers won't announce it politely; they'll declare blank sailings and rebook cargo. Importers holding inventory in Montreal warehouses waiting for the next vessel slot could face another 10-day slip.
The rational move for most forwarders right now is to assume Hormuz remains congested and premium-priced through Q1 2025, regardless of this ceasefire window. Book early. Accept longer lead times. Use consolidation services to lock in shipping costs across multiple weeks, rather than hoping for a rate drop that won't come.
Ops-Level Action: Update Your Buffer and Communicate with Your 3PL
The traders and procurement teams are probably watching the news and expecting faster arrivals. They won't happen. If you're managing imports through a 3PL Montreal near me, now is the time to send a note to your supply chain partners: add 7–10 days to all Asia-origin ETAs for the next 90 days. Don't wait until day 28 of a planned 35-day transit to discover the vessel was rerouted and now needs 48 days.
Lock in drayage windows early, especially if you're pulling from Port of Montreal. Winter capacity at the docks tightens fast, and if half a dozen rerouted vessels discharge simultaneously when Hormuz does fully reopen, drayage availability will vanish. Negotiate a buffer with your 3PL on window flexibility; a $200 buffer fee is cheaper than a $1,200 demurrage spike on a missed appointment.
Check your bonded warehouse agreements too. If your current facility charges demurrage on a flat per-day rate, negotiate a tiered rate for extended holds beyond 14 days. Storage is going to be sticky for the next quarter, and locking in favorable terms now beats paying peak rates in December and January.
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The Bottom Line
The Strait reopening is real, but it's not a reset. It's a potential stepping stone—and the market is not betting heavily on it yet. Carriers are still moving cautiously, rates are still elevated, and your lead times are still longer than they were six months ago. Plan for that reality. Talk to your 3PL about extended dwell assumptions. Update your supply chain timelines. And don't count on normalization until you see sustained carrier deployments through Hormuz for at least three weeks straight—which we're nowhere near right now.
Originally published at https://www.fywarehouse.com/news/hormuz-reopens-but-your-3pl-montreal-near-me-is-still-managing-risk-d95285bf.
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