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The most exciting "research"? "Online celebrity AI Research Institute": Public data missed 50% of Hormuz's real traffic
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12:41","market":"other","language":"zh","title":"The most exciting \"research\"? \"Online celebrity AI Research Institute\": Public data missed 50% of Hormuz's real traffic","url":"https://stock-news.laohu8.com/highlight/detail?id=2625819624","media":"华尔街见闻","summary":"霍尔木兹海峡到底开没开?Citrini分析师冒死亲赴一线“数船”揭开真相:公开AIS系统竟漏报了近50%的真实流量!海峡并非简单的“非开即关”,而是处于随时变化的“动态执法”中。全球能源与航运供应链将面临更频繁、难测的剧烈波动,摒弃单一数据源,掌握多源验证的信息优势已成交易制胜关键。","content":"<p><html><head></head><body>The most \"exploded\" material in today's financial circle comes from an article about Hormuz<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/002320\">Straits</a>Front-line field reports of.</p><p>Citrini Research, a Research institution that used an AI \"thought experiment\" report \"Global Intelligence Crisis in 2028\" to set off a storm in the market and even \"collapsed\" the stock prices of a number of related companies, this time threw out a heavy geo-material. It has caused quite a shock among traders, shipping insurance and energy research circles for a simple reason: When the market debated whether the Strait was \"open or not, and whether it would suddenly close\", the report directly brought the discussion back to the scene.</p><p>The report featured the enigmatic \"Analyst#3\" of Citrini Research. Unlike the usual second-hand compilation, he chose to \"count ships\" near the strait in person, look at the channel, chat with locals and crew members, and record details of inspections, detentions and risks encountered along the way. Many readers' first reaction after reading it is: This is more like a battlefield reconnaissance log, not like a macro comment made in the office-it is also the impact that Citrini always \"brings the market back to reality with details\".</p><p>\"Analyst 3\" observed at the scene that the number of ships actually passing through the Strait of Hormuz was significantly higher than the level presented by the public AIS data, and that the market systematically underestimated the real flow. The key figure given in the report is glaring – \"AIS systems underreport approximately 50% of actual passing vessels per day in the current environment\".</p><p>More importantly, he describes the Straits status quo as a state of \"dynamic enforcement\": the Straits are not well-suited to be generalized with the \"open/closed\" binary label, because the field rules change, and so do the enforcers. The report wrote that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) dominated the new rule of \"who can pass\" on the spot, and patrol boats and Shahed drones were frequently active, which brought fluctuation risks to the global oil and gas supply chain may be amplified at any time.</p><p><div><h2>How to fill in the information blank: \"counting ships\" on the spot has become the most direct way</h2></div>The Strait of Hormuz is like a \"master valve\" for global energy.<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/USEG\">U.S. Energy</a>The Information Agency (EIA) has long estimated that the Strait of Hormuz carries a considerable proportion of the world's maritime crude oil and refined oil flow (often quoted as about 20%), and any news of \"misjudgment\" will quickly be reflected in oil prices, freight rates and insurance rates.</p><p>The problem is that the tools commonly used in the market — public AIS, partial satellite imagery, scattered anonymous intelligence — each have their own blind spots. Citrini gave a very straightforward judgment in the report: \"When there is a huge information gap in the market about whether the strait is 'open or closed', the only way to go to the site and count ships is the most direct and effective way.\" This explains why the report is concerned: it provides scarce first-hand observations at the expense of extremely high personal risk.</p><p><div><h2>'High-stakes forensics' from Dubai to Musandem</h2></div>Citrini's expedition route was written in detail: Dubai → Fujairah oil port → Musandem province (Khasab) in Oman → attempt to enter the core waters of the strait by speedboat. The value of this path is that it links the whole chain of \"port-supply-border enforcement-sea passage\" to observe, rather than just staring at the stretch of water in the middle of the strait.</p><p>Nor was he carrying gear like a normal business trip: a Leica Zoom camera, recording glasses, an EPIRB distress beacon, about $15,000 in cash, and he mentioned bringing a spare cell phone (including a<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/XIACY\">Millet</a>cell phones) as well as supplies such as Zyn. The report has an obvious on-the-spot tone, for example, he described the trip as \"like writing a research report into a waterproof bag\", ready to deal with seizures and emergencies.</p><p><div><h2>Key Discovery 1: AIS is \"half less\", and dark AIS and \"hidden corridor\" are filling in</h2></div>One of Citrini's biggest conclusions is a direct blow to AIS reliability. He wrote: \"The AIS system misreports about 50 percent of actual passing ships every day in the current environment, and the public data that the market relies on is no longer reliable.\" If AIS is analogized to navigational positioning on highways, it does show most vehicles, but when some vehicles are \"off-location\" or take small roads that are not marked by public maps, the screen looks empty.</p><p>At the scene, he observed more ships passing, especially the permitted channels that some ships chose to approach the Iranian coast, which he called \"hidden corridors\". Some of these vessels employ dark AIS (off signal) or do not rely entirely on public tracking systems. For trading and risk control, this means a practical problem: using public AIS to estimate \"whether the traffic has dropped sharply\" is likely to underestimate the real traffic, thus amplifying the panic or mismatch risk premium.</p><p>To prove this, BIMCO, a shipping industry organization, and some insurance and maritime notification channels (such as UKMTO's navigation safety notification system) have long reminded that in high-risk waters, whether AIS is turned on or not often obeys safety and avoidance strategies, and there are naturally deviations in public data. Citrini's contribution is that he quantifies this \"bias\" into a more impactful approximate proportion.</p><p><div><h2>Key finding two: IRGC-led 'dynamic enforcement', making the strait more like 'temporary traffic control'</h2></div>At the security and political level, the report emphasizes that the control logic of the Straits is changing. He wrote that the IRGC was on-site to develop and enforce new rules of passage, patrol boats were active with Shahed drones, and the strait was in a state of \"dynamic law enforcement\". To use a better understood metaphor, this is a bit like a key arterial road: the road is not blocked, but the traffic police set up temporary lanes, random inspections and release lists at any time, and the traffic experience and risk will fluctuate at the hourly level.</p><p>On sensitive issues, the report also leaves room for market understanding: some regional security professionals will think that tightening controls has its border security and deterrence needs; Shipping companies and traders are more concerned about the unpredictability caused by the temporary nature of rules, because what the supply chain fears most is not \"expensive\", but \"unsure when to get stuck\".</p><p><div><h2>Inspection, detention and \"signing a promise\": Why is this material expensive</h2></div>The most vivid part of the report happened at the border checkpoint in Oman. Citrini described being asked to sign a commitment to \"no photography, no journalism, no intelligence gathering\". He then took a GPS-free speedboat driven by a stranger. The report said that the speedboat was \"only 18 miles off the Iranian coast\" and even showed details of \"swimming and smoking cigars in the strait\" to illustrate how close he was to the real shipping channel and law enforcement.</p><p>The more dramatic part: He was intercepted, detained by the Oman Coast Guard, his phone confiscated, and notes and photos may have fallen into official hands. For readers, the significance of this kind of plot is not to hunt for curiosity, but to explain the fact that when data sources become more and more difficult and public information becomes more and more fragmented, the cost of first-hand observation is rising sharply, which will directly affect the information quality and pricing efficiency of the market.</p><p><div><h2>How should the market judge \"strait risk\" in the future?</h2></div>A common question is, what else can the market trust when public AIS is unreliable?</p><p>The more realistic answer: change \"single data source\" to \"multi-source puzzle\". Trading and risk control teams can cross-validate public AIS, commercial satellites (especially SAR, which is more night-and cloud-friendly), port handling and queuing data, insurance quotation changes, and official maritime notifications. Think of it as looking at the same intersection with multiple cameras. When one is blocked, the whole traffic flow can still be restored.</p><p>Another question is, how will this affect oil prices and shipping?</p><p>EIA and the International Energy Agency (IEA) and other institutions have repeatedly emphasized the importance of Hormuz. The risk premium often comes from the product of \"disruption probability × disruption impact\". Citrini's report boosts the market's understanding of the \"impact\" part: the strait is not showing a simple shutdown, the mode of passage is changing, the rules are more temporary, and the risks are more like \"<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/600668\">spike</a>Pulse \". Such risks are usually more sensitive to the transmission of option volatility, freight and insurance surcharges than to spot transactions.</p><p><div><h2>Volatility comes from 'unpredictable temporary rules'</h2></div>Citrini is cautious about the future: IRGC-led field rules will make the Straits more prone to sudden friction, and fluctuations in global oil supply chains may take on the characteristics of \"short, violent and difficult to verify\" more frequently. For markets, such environments will reward participants who respond quickly and have more three-dimensional information sources.</p><p>His advice is also clear: Don't take the Straits as a switch, don't take the AIS as the truth. The reason why the phrase \"go to the site and count ships\" in the report is shocking is that it reminds the market that when the information gap is large enough, risk control and research need to be closer to the ground reality, even if the cost is high and the risk is high.</p><p>In short, the core point of the report is,<strong>The real traffic of the Strait of Hormuz may be significantly higher than that shown by public AIS. The strait order is characterized by dynamic law enforcement. Any information of \"misjudging opening and closing\" may amplify the fluctuations of global energy and shipping chains.</strong></p><p>On the one hand, the market may need to recalibrate the \"flow-risk premium\" mapping; On the other hand, data methodologies can be forced to escalate from relying on a single publicly available metric to more expensive but more robust multi-source validation. For the trading, shipping and industrial side, such changes will push the \"information advantage\" to a more central position.</p><p></body></html></p>","collect":0,"html":"<!DOCTYPE html>\n<html>\n<head>\n<meta http-equiv=\"Content-Type\" content=\"text/html; charset=utf-8\" />\n<meta name=\"viewport\" content=\"width=device-width,initial-scale=1.0,minimum-scale=1.0,maximum-scale=1.0,user-scalable=no\"/>\n<meta name=\"format-detection\" content=\"telephone=no,email=no,address=no\" />\n<title>The most exciting \"research\"? \"Online celebrity AI Research Institute\": Public data missed 50% of Hormuz's real traffic</title>\n<style type=\"text/css\">\na,abbr,acronym,address,applet,article,aside,audio,b,big,blockquote,body,canvas,caption,center,cite,code,dd,del,details,dfn,div,dl,dt,\nem,embed,fieldset,figcaption,figure,footer,form,h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6,header,hgroup,html,i,iframe,img,ins,kbd,label,legend,li,mark,menu,nav,\nobject,ol,output,p,pre,q,ruby,s,samp,section,small,span,strike,strong,sub,summary,sup,table,tbody,td,tfoot,th,thead,time,tr,tt,u,ul,var,video{ font:inherit;margin:0;padding:0;vertical-align:baseline;border:0 }\nbody{ font-size:16px; line-height:1.5; color:#999; background:transparent; }\n.wrapper{ overflow:hidden;word-break:break-all;padding:10px; }\nh1,h2{ font-weight:normal; line-height:1.35; margin-bottom:.6em; }\nh3,h4,h5,h6{ line-height:1.35; margin-bottom:1em; }\nh1{ font-size:24px; }\nh2{ font-size:20px; }\nh3{ font-size:18px; }\nh4{ font-size:16px; }\nh5{ font-size:14px; }\nh6{ font-size:12px; }\np,ul,ol,blockquote,dl,table{ margin:1.2em 0; }\nul,ol{ margin-left:2em; }\nul{ list-style:disc; }\nol{ list-style:decimal; }\nli,li p{ margin:10px 0;}\nimg{ max-width:100%;display:block;margin:0 auto 1em; }\nblockquote{ color:#B5B2B1; border-left:3px solid #aaa; padding:1em; }\nstrong,b{font-weight:bold;}\nem,i{font-style:italic;}\ntable{ width:100%;border-collapse:collapse;border-spacing:1px;margin:1em 0;font-size:.9em; }\nth,td{ padding:5px;text-align:left;border:1px solid #aaa; }\nth{ font-weight:bold;background:#5d5d5d; }\n.symbol-link{font-weight:bold;}\n/* header{ border-bottom:1px solid #494756; } */\n.title{ margin:0 0 8px;line-height:1.3;color:#ddd; }\n.meta {color:#5e5c6d;font-size:13px;margin:0 0 .5em; }\na{text-decoration:none; color:#2a4b87;}\n.meta .head { display: inline-block; overflow: hidden}\n.head .h-thumb { width: 30px; height: 30px; margin: 0; padding: 0; border-radius: 50%; float: left;}\n.head .h-content { margin: 0; padding: 0 0 0 9px; float: left;}\n.head .h-name {font-size: 13px; color: #eee; margin: 0;}\n.head .h-time {font-size: 12.5px; color: #7E829C; margin: 0;}\n.small {font-size: 12.5px; display: inline-block; transform: scale(0.9); -webkit-transform: scale(0.9); transform-origin: left; -webkit-transform-origin: left;}\n.smaller {font-size: 12.5px; display: inline-block; transform: scale(0.8); -webkit-transform: scale(0.8); transform-origin: left; -webkit-transform-origin: left;}\n.bt-text {font-size: 12px;margin: 1.5em 0 0 0}\n.bt-text p {margin: 0}\n</style>\n</head>\n<body>\n<div class=\"wrapper\">\n<header>\n<h2 class=\"title\">\nThe most exciting \"research\"? \"Online celebrity AI Research Institute\": Public data missed 50% of Hormuz's real traffic\n</h2>\n<h4 class=\"meta\">\n<a class=\"head\" href=\"https://laohu8.com/wemedia/1084101182\">\n\n<div class=\"h-thumb\" style=\"background-image:url(https://static.tigerbbs.com/66809d1f5c2e43e2bdf15820c6d6897e);background-size:cover;\"></div>\n\n<div class=\"h-content\">\n<p class=\"h-name\">华尔街见闻 </p>\n<p class=\"h-time smaller\">2026-04-06 12:41</p>\n</div>\n</a>\n</h4>\n</header>\n<article>\n<p><html><head></head><body>The most \"exploded\" material in today's financial circle comes from an article about Hormuz<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/002320\">Straits</a>Front-line field reports of.</p><p>Citrini Research, a Research institution that used an AI \"thought experiment\" report \"Global Intelligence Crisis in 2028\" to set off a storm in the market and even \"collapsed\" the stock prices of a number of related companies, this time threw out a heavy geo-material. It has caused quite a shock among traders, shipping insurance and energy research circles for a simple reason: When the market debated whether the Strait was \"open or not, and whether it would suddenly close\", the report directly brought the discussion back to the scene.</p><p>The report featured the enigmatic \"Analyst#3\" of Citrini Research. Unlike the usual second-hand compilation, he chose to \"count ships\" near the strait in person, look at the channel, chat with locals and crew members, and record details of inspections, detentions and risks encountered along the way. Many readers' first reaction after reading it is: This is more like a battlefield reconnaissance log, not like a macro comment made in the office-it is also the impact that Citrini always \"brings the market back to reality with details\".</p><p>\"Analyst 3\" observed at the scene that the number of ships actually passing through the Strait of Hormuz was significantly higher than the level presented by the public AIS data, and that the market systematically underestimated the real flow. The key figure given in the report is glaring – \"AIS systems underreport approximately 50% of actual passing vessels per day in the current environment\".</p><p>More importantly, he describes the Straits status quo as a state of \"dynamic enforcement\": the Straits are not well-suited to be generalized with the \"open/closed\" binary label, because the field rules change, and so do the enforcers. The report wrote that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) dominated the new rule of \"who can pass\" on the spot, and patrol boats and Shahed drones were frequently active, which brought fluctuation risks to the global oil and gas supply chain may be amplified at any time.</p><p><div><h2>How to fill in the information blank: \"counting ships\" on the spot has become the most direct way</h2></div>The Strait of Hormuz is like a \"master valve\" for global energy.<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/USEG\">U.S. Energy</a>The Information Agency (EIA) has long estimated that the Strait of Hormuz carries a considerable proportion of the world's maritime crude oil and refined oil flow (often quoted as about 20%), and any news of \"misjudgment\" will quickly be reflected in oil prices, freight rates and insurance rates.</p><p>The problem is that the tools commonly used in the market — public AIS, partial satellite imagery, scattered anonymous intelligence — each have their own blind spots. Citrini gave a very straightforward judgment in the report: \"When there is a huge information gap in the market about whether the strait is 'open or closed', the only way to go to the site and count ships is the most direct and effective way.\" This explains why the report is concerned: it provides scarce first-hand observations at the expense of extremely high personal risk.</p><p><div><h2>'High-stakes forensics' from Dubai to Musandem</h2></div>Citrini's expedition route was written in detail: Dubai → Fujairah oil port → Musandem province (Khasab) in Oman → attempt to enter the core waters of the strait by speedboat. The value of this path is that it links the whole chain of \"port-supply-border enforcement-sea passage\" to observe, rather than just staring at the stretch of water in the middle of the strait.</p><p>Nor was he carrying gear like a normal business trip: a Leica Zoom camera, recording glasses, an EPIRB distress beacon, about $15,000 in cash, and he mentioned bringing a spare cell phone (including a<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/XIACY\">Millet</a>cell phones) as well as supplies such as Zyn. The report has an obvious on-the-spot tone, for example, he described the trip as \"like writing a research report into a waterproof bag\", ready to deal with seizures and emergencies.</p><p><div><h2>Key Discovery 1: AIS is \"half less\", and dark AIS and \"hidden corridor\" are filling in</h2></div>One of Citrini's biggest conclusions is a direct blow to AIS reliability. He wrote: \"The AIS system misreports about 50 percent of actual passing ships every day in the current environment, and the public data that the market relies on is no longer reliable.\" If AIS is analogized to navigational positioning on highways, it does show most vehicles, but when some vehicles are \"off-location\" or take small roads that are not marked by public maps, the screen looks empty.</p><p>At the scene, he observed more ships passing, especially the permitted channels that some ships chose to approach the Iranian coast, which he called \"hidden corridors\". Some of these vessels employ dark AIS (off signal) or do not rely entirely on public tracking systems. For trading and risk control, this means a practical problem: using public AIS to estimate \"whether the traffic has dropped sharply\" is likely to underestimate the real traffic, thus amplifying the panic or mismatch risk premium.</p><p>To prove this, BIMCO, a shipping industry organization, and some insurance and maritime notification channels (such as UKMTO's navigation safety notification system) have long reminded that in high-risk waters, whether AIS is turned on or not often obeys safety and avoidance strategies, and there are naturally deviations in public data. Citrini's contribution is that he quantifies this \"bias\" into a more impactful approximate proportion.</p><p><div><h2>Key finding two: IRGC-led 'dynamic enforcement', making the strait more like 'temporary traffic control'</h2></div>At the security and political level, the report emphasizes that the control logic of the Straits is changing. He wrote that the IRGC was on-site to develop and enforce new rules of passage, patrol boats were active with Shahed drones, and the strait was in a state of \"dynamic law enforcement\". To use a better understood metaphor, this is a bit like a key arterial road: the road is not blocked, but the traffic police set up temporary lanes, random inspections and release lists at any time, and the traffic experience and risk will fluctuate at the hourly level.</p><p>On sensitive issues, the report also leaves room for market understanding: some regional security professionals will think that tightening controls has its border security and deterrence needs; Shipping companies and traders are more concerned about the unpredictability caused by the temporary nature of rules, because what the supply chain fears most is not \"expensive\", but \"unsure when to get stuck\".</p><p><div><h2>Inspection, detention and \"signing a promise\": Why is this material expensive</h2></div>The most vivid part of the report happened at the border checkpoint in Oman. Citrini described being asked to sign a commitment to \"no photography, no journalism, no intelligence gathering\". He then took a GPS-free speedboat driven by a stranger. The report said that the speedboat was \"only 18 miles off the Iranian coast\" and even showed details of \"swimming and smoking cigars in the strait\" to illustrate how close he was to the real shipping channel and law enforcement.</p><p>The more dramatic part: He was intercepted, detained by the Oman Coast Guard, his phone confiscated, and notes and photos may have fallen into official hands. For readers, the significance of this kind of plot is not to hunt for curiosity, but to explain the fact that when data sources become more and more difficult and public information becomes more and more fragmented, the cost of first-hand observation is rising sharply, which will directly affect the information quality and pricing efficiency of the market.</p><p><div><h2>How should the market judge \"strait risk\" in the future?</h2></div>A common question is, what else can the market trust when public AIS is unreliable?</p><p>The more realistic answer: change \"single data source\" to \"multi-source puzzle\". Trading and risk control teams can cross-validate public AIS, commercial satellites (especially SAR, which is more night-and cloud-friendly), port handling and queuing data, insurance quotation changes, and official maritime notifications. Think of it as looking at the same intersection with multiple cameras. When one is blocked, the whole traffic flow can still be restored.</p><p>Another question is, how will this affect oil prices and shipping?</p><p>EIA and the International Energy Agency (IEA) and other institutions have repeatedly emphasized the importance of Hormuz. The risk premium often comes from the product of \"disruption probability × disruption impact\". Citrini's report boosts the market's understanding of the \"impact\" part: the strait is not showing a simple shutdown, the mode of passage is changing, the rules are more temporary, and the risks are more like \"<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/600668\">spike</a>Pulse \". Such risks are usually more sensitive to the transmission of option volatility, freight and insurance surcharges than to spot transactions.</p><p><div><h2>Volatility comes from 'unpredictable temporary rules'</h2></div>Citrini is cautious about the future: IRGC-led field rules will make the Straits more prone to sudden friction, and fluctuations in global oil supply chains may take on the characteristics of \"short, violent and difficult to verify\" more frequently. For markets, such environments will reward participants who respond quickly and have more three-dimensional information sources.</p><p>His advice is also clear: Don't take the Straits as a switch, don't take the AIS as the truth. The reason why the phrase \"go to the site and count ships\" in the report is shocking is that it reminds the market that when the information gap is large enough, risk control and research need to be closer to the ground reality, even if the cost is high and the risk is high.</p><p>In short, the core point of the report is,<strong>The real traffic of the Strait of Hormuz may be significantly higher than that shown by public AIS. The strait order is characterized by dynamic law enforcement. Any information of \"misjudging opening and closing\" may amplify the fluctuations of global energy and shipping chains.</strong></p><p>On the one hand, the market may need to recalibrate the \"flow-risk premium\" mapping; On the other hand, data methodologies can be forced to escalate from relying on a single publicly available metric to more expensive but more robust multi-source validation. For the trading, shipping and industrial side, such changes will push the \"information advantage\" to a more central position.</p><p></body></html></p>\n</article>\n</div>\n</body>\n</html>\n","type":0,"thumbnail":"https://community-static.tradeup.com/news/720622f3a00b611476f1d69c1f2cbf0d","relate_stocks":{"AGIX":"通用人工智能 ETF-AGIX","ARTY":"ISHARES FUTURE AI & TECH ETF","CHAT":"ROUNDHILL GENERATIVE AI & TECHNOLOGY ETF","AIPO":"Defiance AI and Power Infrastructure ETF"},"source_url":"https://wallstreetcn.com/articles/3769308","is_english":false,"share_image_url":"https://static.laohu8.com/e9f99090a1c2ed51c021029395664489","article_id":"2625819624","content_text":"今日金融圈最“炸”的一份材料,来自一篇关于霍尔木兹海峡的一线实地报告。\n之前曾用一篇 AI “思想实验”报告《2028 年全球智能危机》在市场上掀起风暴、甚至把一批相关公司股价“打崩”的研究机构 Citrini Research,这次又抛出了一份重磅地缘材料。它在交易员、航运保险和能源研究圈里引发了不小的震动,原因很简单:当市场争论海峡“到底开没开、会不会突然关”时,这份报告直接把讨论拉回了现场。\n报告主角是 Citrini Research 的神秘的“3号分析师”。与常见的二手汇编不同,他选择亲自去海峡附近“数船”、看航道、和当地人及船员聊天,并记录下沿途遇到的检查、扣留与风险细节。很多读者看完的第一反应是:这更像战地侦察日志,不像办公室里做出来的宏观评论——也正是 Citrini 一贯“用细节把市场拉回现实”的那种冲击感。\n“3号分析师”在现场观察到,实际通过霍尔木兹海峡的船只数量明显高于公开 AIS 数据所呈现的水平,市场对真实流量存在系统性低估。报告给出的关键数字很刺眼——“AIS 系统在当前环境下每天大约漏报 50% 的实际过往船舶”。\n更重要的是,他把海峡现状描述为一种“动态执法”的状态:海峡不太适合用“开放/封闭”二元标签概括,因为现场规则在变,执行者也在变。报告写道,伊朗革命卫队(IRGC)在现场主导“谁能通过”的新规矩,巡逻艇与 Shahed 无人机活动频繁,给全球油气供应链带来的波动风险随时可能放大。\n\n信息空白怎么填:现场“数船”成了最直接的办法\n\n霍尔木兹海峡对全球能源像一段“总阀门”。美国能源信息署(EIA)长期估算,霍尔木兹海峡承载全球相当比例的海运原油与成品油流量(常被引用在约两成上下的量级),任何“误判开合”的消息都会迅速体现在油价、运价与保险费率上。\n问题在于,市场常用的工具——公开 AIS、部分卫星图、零散的匿名情报——各有盲区。Citrini 在报告里给了句很直白的判断:“当市场对海峡‘到底是开放还是封闭’存在巨大信息空白时,只有去现场数船才是最直接有效的途径。”这也解释了这份报告为什么会引发关注:它提供了稀缺的第一手观测,而代价是极高的个人风险。\n\n从迪拜到穆桑代姆的“高风险取证”\n\nCitrini 的考察路线被写得很细:迪拜 → 富查伊拉油港 → 阿曼穆桑代姆省(Khasab)→ 试图乘快艇进入海峡核心水域。这条路径的价值在于,它把“港口—补给—边境执法—海上通行”这一整套链条串起来观察,而不仅盯着海峡中线那一段水域。\n他携带的装备也不像普通出差:徕卡变焦相机、录音眼镜、EPIRB 求救信标、约 1.5 万美元现金,还提到带了备用手机(包括一部小米手机)以及 Zyn 等补给。报告里带有明显的现场口吻,比如他形容这趟行程“像把研究报告写进了防水袋里”,随时准备应对扣押与突发状况。\n\n关键发现一:AIS“少了一半”,暗 AIS 与“隐藏走廊”在补位\n\nCitrini 最重磅的结论之一,是对 AIS 可靠性的直接打击。他写道:“AIS 系统在当前环境下每天大约漏报 50% 的实际过往船舶,市场依赖的公开数据已不可靠。”如果把 AIS 类比成高速公路的导航定位,它确实能显示大多数车辆,但当一部分车“关定位”或走了不被公开地图标注的小路,屏幕上看起来就会空一大片。\n他在现场观察到更多船舶通行,尤其是一些船选择靠近伊朗海岸的许可通道,被他称作“隐藏走廊”。其中一部分船舶采用暗 AIS(关闭信号)或不完全依赖公开跟踪系统。对于交易与风控来说,这意味着一个现实问题:用公开 AIS 估算“流量是否锐减”,很可能把真实通行量低估,从而放大恐慌或错配风险溢价。\n为佐证这一点,航运行业机构 BIMCO、以及部分保险与海事通报渠道(例如 UKMTO 的航行安全通报体系)长期都提醒过:在高风险海域,AIS 的开启与否常常服从安全与规避策略,公开数据天然存在偏差。Citrini 的贡献在于,他把这种“偏差”量化成了一个更具冲击力的近似比例。\n\n关键发现二:IRGC 主导的“动态执法”,让海峡更像“临时交通管制”\n\n在安全与政治层面,报告强调海峡的控制逻辑正在变化。他写道,IRGC 在现场制定并执行新的通行规则,巡逻艇与 Shahed 无人机频繁活动,海峡处于“动态执法”状态。用更好理解的比喻来说,这有点像一条关键干道:路没有封死,但交警随时设置临时车道、抽检、放行名单,通行体验与风险会在小时级别波动。\n在敏感议题上,报告也给市场留出了理解空间:一部分地区安全人士会认为加强管制有其边境安全与威慑需求;航运公司与贸易商更关心的是规则临时性带来的不可预测性,因为供应链最怕的不是“贵”,而是“说不准什么时候卡住”。\n\n检查、扣留与“签承诺”:为什么说这份材料代价高\n\n报告里最具现场感的一段,发生在阿曼边境检查站。Citrini 描述自己被要求签署“不摄影、不从事新闻、不收集情报”的承诺。随后,他又搭乘陌生人驾驶的无 GPS 快艇,报告写道快艇“距离伊朗海岸仅 18 英里”,甚至出现“在海峡里游泳、抽雪茄”的细节,用来说明他离真实航道与执法力量有多近。\n更戏剧性的部分是:他被阿曼海岸警卫队拦截、扣留,手机被没收,笔记和照片可能已落入官方之手。对读者来说,这类情节的意义不在猎奇,而在解释一个事实:当数据源越来越难、公开信息越来越碎,第一手观察的成本正在急剧上升,这会直接影响市场的信息质量与定价效率。\n\n市场今后该怎么判断“海峡风险”?\n\n一个常见问题是,既然公开 AIS 不可靠,市场还能信什么?\n较现实的答案是:把“单一数据源”改成“多源拼图”。交易与风控团队可以把公开 AIS、商业卫星(尤其是 SAR 对夜间与云层更友好)、港口装卸与排队数据、保险报价变化、以及官方海事通报交叉验证。把它想成用多台摄像头看同一个路口,某一台被遮挡时,整体仍能还原车流大势。\n另一个问题是,这会怎样影响油价与航运?\nEIA 与国际能源署(IEA)等机构反复强调过霍尔木兹的重要性,风险溢价往往来自“中断概率×中断影响”的乘积。Citrini 的报告提升了市场对“影响”部分的理解:海峡并未呈现简单停摆,通行方式在变化,规则更临时,风险更像“尖峰脉冲”。这类风险对期权波动率、运费与保险附加费的传导,通常比对现货成交更敏感。\n\n波动来自“不可预测的临时规则”\n\nCitrini 对未来的判断偏谨慎:IRGC 主导的现场规则将使海峡更容易出现突发摩擦,全球石油供应链的波动可能更频繁地呈现“短促、剧烈、难验证”的特征。对市场而言,这类环境会奖励反应快与信息源更立体的参与者。\n他的建议也很明确:别把海峡当成开关,别把 AIS 当成真相。报告里那句“去现场数船”之所以震撼,是因为它提醒市场:当信息缺口足够大时,风控与研究需要更接近地面现实,哪怕代价高、风险大。\n总之报告的核心观点就是,霍尔木兹海峡的真实通行量可能显著高于公开 AIS 所示,海峡秩序呈现动态执法特征,任何“误判开合”的信息都可能放大全球能源与航运链条的波动。\n一方面,市场可能需要重新校准“流量—风险溢价”的映射;另一方面,数据方法论会被迫升级,从依赖单一公开指标,转向更昂贵但更稳健的多源验证。对交易、航运与产业端来说,这类变化会把“信息优势”推到更核心的位置。","news_type":1,"symbols_score_info":{"AGIX":1.5,"AIPO":1.5,"ARTY":1.5,"CHAT":1.5}},"isVote":1,"tweetType":1,"viewCount":218,"authorTweetTopStatus":1,"verified":2,"comments":[],"imageCount":0,"langContent":"EN","totalScore":0}],"hots":[{"id":550640785602288,"gmtCreate":1775454891174,"gmtModify":1775455977548,"author":{"id":"4113652880316960","authorId":"4113652880316960","name":"ricky的帐户","avatar":"https://community-static.tradeup.com/news/9c7f4c01fbb82926962006574a04f713","crmLevel":12,"crmLevelSwitch":1,"followedFlag":false,"idStr":"4113652880316960","authorIdStr":"4113652880316960"},"themes":[],"title":"","htmlText":"mark","listText":"mark","text":"mark","images":[],"top":1,"highlighted":1,"essential":1,"paper":1,"likeSize":1,"commentSize":0,"repostSize":0,"link":"https://ttm.financial/post/550640785602288","repostId":"2625819624","repostType":2,"repost":{"id":"2625819624","kind":"highlight","weMediaInfo":{"introduction":"追踪全球财经热点,精选影响您财富的资讯,投资理财必备神器!","home_visible":1,"media_name":"华尔街见闻","id":"1084101182","head_image":"https://static.tigerbbs.com/66809d1f5c2e43e2bdf15820c6d6897e"},"pubTimestamp":1775450467,"share":"https://ttm.financial/m/news/2625819624?lang=en_US&edition=fundamental","pubTime":"2026-04-06 12:41","market":"other","language":"zh","title":"The most exciting \"research\"? \"Online celebrity AI Research Institute\": Public data missed 50% of Hormuz's real traffic","url":"https://stock-news.laohu8.com/highlight/detail?id=2625819624","media":"华尔街见闻","summary":"霍尔木兹海峡到底开没开?Citrini分析师冒死亲赴一线“数船”揭开真相:公开AIS系统竟漏报了近50%的真实流量!海峡并非简单的“非开即关”,而是处于随时变化的“动态执法”中。全球能源与航运供应链将面临更频繁、难测的剧烈波动,摒弃单一数据源,掌握多源验证的信息优势已成交易制胜关键。","content":"<p><html><head></head><body>The most \"exploded\" material in today's financial circle comes from an article about Hormuz<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/002320\">Straits</a>Front-line field reports of.</p><p>Citrini Research, a Research institution that used an AI \"thought experiment\" report \"Global Intelligence Crisis in 2028\" to set off a storm in the market and even \"collapsed\" the stock prices of a number of related companies, this time threw out a heavy geo-material. It has caused quite a shock among traders, shipping insurance and energy research circles for a simple reason: When the market debated whether the Strait was \"open or not, and whether it would suddenly close\", the report directly brought the discussion back to the scene.</p><p>The report featured the enigmatic \"Analyst#3\" of Citrini Research. Unlike the usual second-hand compilation, he chose to \"count ships\" near the strait in person, look at the channel, chat with locals and crew members, and record details of inspections, detentions and risks encountered along the way. Many readers' first reaction after reading it is: This is more like a battlefield reconnaissance log, not like a macro comment made in the office-it is also the impact that Citrini always \"brings the market back to reality with details\".</p><p>\"Analyst 3\" observed at the scene that the number of ships actually passing through the Strait of Hormuz was significantly higher than the level presented by the public AIS data, and that the market systematically underestimated the real flow. The key figure given in the report is glaring – \"AIS systems underreport approximately 50% of actual passing vessels per day in the current environment\".</p><p>More importantly, he describes the Straits status quo as a state of \"dynamic enforcement\": the Straits are not well-suited to be generalized with the \"open/closed\" binary label, because the field rules change, and so do the enforcers. The report wrote that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) dominated the new rule of \"who can pass\" on the spot, and patrol boats and Shahed drones were frequently active, which brought fluctuation risks to the global oil and gas supply chain may be amplified at any time.</p><p><div><h2>How to fill in the information blank: \"counting ships\" on the spot has become the most direct way</h2></div>The Strait of Hormuz is like a \"master valve\" for global energy.<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/USEG\">U.S. Energy</a>The Information Agency (EIA) has long estimated that the Strait of Hormuz carries a considerable proportion of the world's maritime crude oil and refined oil flow (often quoted as about 20%), and any news of \"misjudgment\" will quickly be reflected in oil prices, freight rates and insurance rates.</p><p>The problem is that the tools commonly used in the market — public AIS, partial satellite imagery, scattered anonymous intelligence — each have their own blind spots. Citrini gave a very straightforward judgment in the report: \"When there is a huge information gap in the market about whether the strait is 'open or closed', the only way to go to the site and count ships is the most direct and effective way.\" This explains why the report is concerned: it provides scarce first-hand observations at the expense of extremely high personal risk.</p><p><div><h2>'High-stakes forensics' from Dubai to Musandem</h2></div>Citrini's expedition route was written in detail: Dubai → Fujairah oil port → Musandem province (Khasab) in Oman → attempt to enter the core waters of the strait by speedboat. The value of this path is that it links the whole chain of \"port-supply-border enforcement-sea passage\" to observe, rather than just staring at the stretch of water in the middle of the strait.</p><p>Nor was he carrying gear like a normal business trip: a Leica Zoom camera, recording glasses, an EPIRB distress beacon, about $15,000 in cash, and he mentioned bringing a spare cell phone (including a<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/XIACY\">Millet</a>cell phones) as well as supplies such as Zyn. The report has an obvious on-the-spot tone, for example, he described the trip as \"like writing a research report into a waterproof bag\", ready to deal with seizures and emergencies.</p><p><div><h2>Key Discovery 1: AIS is \"half less\", and dark AIS and \"hidden corridor\" are filling in</h2></div>One of Citrini's biggest conclusions is a direct blow to AIS reliability. He wrote: \"The AIS system misreports about 50 percent of actual passing ships every day in the current environment, and the public data that the market relies on is no longer reliable.\" If AIS is analogized to navigational positioning on highways, it does show most vehicles, but when some vehicles are \"off-location\" or take small roads that are not marked by public maps, the screen looks empty.</p><p>At the scene, he observed more ships passing, especially the permitted channels that some ships chose to approach the Iranian coast, which he called \"hidden corridors\". Some of these vessels employ dark AIS (off signal) or do not rely entirely on public tracking systems. For trading and risk control, this means a practical problem: using public AIS to estimate \"whether the traffic has dropped sharply\" is likely to underestimate the real traffic, thus amplifying the panic or mismatch risk premium.</p><p>To prove this, BIMCO, a shipping industry organization, and some insurance and maritime notification channels (such as UKMTO's navigation safety notification system) have long reminded that in high-risk waters, whether AIS is turned on or not often obeys safety and avoidance strategies, and there are naturally deviations in public data. Citrini's contribution is that he quantifies this \"bias\" into a more impactful approximate proportion.</p><p><div><h2>Key finding two: IRGC-led 'dynamic enforcement', making the strait more like 'temporary traffic control'</h2></div>At the security and political level, the report emphasizes that the control logic of the Straits is changing. He wrote that the IRGC was on-site to develop and enforce new rules of passage, patrol boats were active with Shahed drones, and the strait was in a state of \"dynamic law enforcement\". To use a better understood metaphor, this is a bit like a key arterial road: the road is not blocked, but the traffic police set up temporary lanes, random inspections and release lists at any time, and the traffic experience and risk will fluctuate at the hourly level.</p><p>On sensitive issues, the report also leaves room for market understanding: some regional security professionals will think that tightening controls has its border security and deterrence needs; Shipping companies and traders are more concerned about the unpredictability caused by the temporary nature of rules, because what the supply chain fears most is not \"expensive\", but \"unsure when to get stuck\".</p><p><div><h2>Inspection, detention and \"signing a promise\": Why is this material expensive</h2></div>The most vivid part of the report happened at the border checkpoint in Oman. Citrini described being asked to sign a commitment to \"no photography, no journalism, no intelligence gathering\". He then took a GPS-free speedboat driven by a stranger. The report said that the speedboat was \"only 18 miles off the Iranian coast\" and even showed details of \"swimming and smoking cigars in the strait\" to illustrate how close he was to the real shipping channel and law enforcement.</p><p>The more dramatic part: He was intercepted, detained by the Oman Coast Guard, his phone confiscated, and notes and photos may have fallen into official hands. For readers, the significance of this kind of plot is not to hunt for curiosity, but to explain the fact that when data sources become more and more difficult and public information becomes more and more fragmented, the cost of first-hand observation is rising sharply, which will directly affect the information quality and pricing efficiency of the market.</p><p><div><h2>How should the market judge \"strait risk\" in the future?</h2></div>A common question is, what else can the market trust when public AIS is unreliable?</p><p>The more realistic answer: change \"single data source\" to \"multi-source puzzle\". Trading and risk control teams can cross-validate public AIS, commercial satellites (especially SAR, which is more night-and cloud-friendly), port handling and queuing data, insurance quotation changes, and official maritime notifications. Think of it as looking at the same intersection with multiple cameras. When one is blocked, the whole traffic flow can still be restored.</p><p>Another question is, how will this affect oil prices and shipping?</p><p>EIA and the International Energy Agency (IEA) and other institutions have repeatedly emphasized the importance of Hormuz. The risk premium often comes from the product of \"disruption probability × disruption impact\". Citrini's report boosts the market's understanding of the \"impact\" part: the strait is not showing a simple shutdown, the mode of passage is changing, the rules are more temporary, and the risks are more like \"<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/600668\">spike</a>Pulse \". Such risks are usually more sensitive to the transmission of option volatility, freight and insurance surcharges than to spot transactions.</p><p><div><h2>Volatility comes from 'unpredictable temporary rules'</h2></div>Citrini is cautious about the future: IRGC-led field rules will make the Straits more prone to sudden friction, and fluctuations in global oil supply chains may take on the characteristics of \"short, violent and difficult to verify\" more frequently. For markets, such environments will reward participants who respond quickly and have more three-dimensional information sources.</p><p>His advice is also clear: Don't take the Straits as a switch, don't take the AIS as the truth. The reason why the phrase \"go to the site and count ships\" in the report is shocking is that it reminds the market that when the information gap is large enough, risk control and research need to be closer to the ground reality, even if the cost is high and the risk is high.</p><p>In short, the core point of the report is,<strong>The real traffic of the Strait of Hormuz may be significantly higher than that shown by public AIS. The strait order is characterized by dynamic law enforcement. Any information of \"misjudging opening and closing\" may amplify the fluctuations of global energy and shipping chains.</strong></p><p>On the one hand, the market may need to recalibrate the \"flow-risk premium\" mapping; On the other hand, data methodologies can be forced to escalate from relying on a single publicly available metric to more expensive but more robust multi-source validation. For the trading, shipping and industrial side, such changes will push the \"information advantage\" to a more central position.</p><p></body></html></p>","collect":0,"html":"<!DOCTYPE html>\n<html>\n<head>\n<meta http-equiv=\"Content-Type\" content=\"text/html; charset=utf-8\" />\n<meta name=\"viewport\" content=\"width=device-width,initial-scale=1.0,minimum-scale=1.0,maximum-scale=1.0,user-scalable=no\"/>\n<meta name=\"format-detection\" content=\"telephone=no,email=no,address=no\" />\n<title>The most exciting \"research\"? \"Online celebrity AI Research Institute\": Public data missed 50% of Hormuz's real traffic</title>\n<style type=\"text/css\">\na,abbr,acronym,address,applet,article,aside,audio,b,big,blockquote,body,canvas,caption,center,cite,code,dd,del,details,dfn,div,dl,dt,\nem,embed,fieldset,figcaption,figure,footer,form,h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6,header,hgroup,html,i,iframe,img,ins,kbd,label,legend,li,mark,menu,nav,\nobject,ol,output,p,pre,q,ruby,s,samp,section,small,span,strike,strong,sub,summary,sup,table,tbody,td,tfoot,th,thead,time,tr,tt,u,ul,var,video{ font:inherit;margin:0;padding:0;vertical-align:baseline;border:0 }\nbody{ font-size:16px; line-height:1.5; color:#999; background:transparent; }\n.wrapper{ overflow:hidden;word-break:break-all;padding:10px; }\nh1,h2{ font-weight:normal; line-height:1.35; margin-bottom:.6em; }\nh3,h4,h5,h6{ line-height:1.35; margin-bottom:1em; }\nh1{ font-size:24px; }\nh2{ font-size:20px; }\nh3{ font-size:18px; }\nh4{ font-size:16px; }\nh5{ font-size:14px; }\nh6{ font-size:12px; }\np,ul,ol,blockquote,dl,table{ margin:1.2em 0; }\nul,ol{ margin-left:2em; }\nul{ list-style:disc; }\nol{ list-style:decimal; }\nli,li p{ margin:10px 0;}\nimg{ max-width:100%;display:block;margin:0 auto 1em; }\nblockquote{ color:#B5B2B1; border-left:3px solid #aaa; padding:1em; }\nstrong,b{font-weight:bold;}\nem,i{font-style:italic;}\ntable{ width:100%;border-collapse:collapse;border-spacing:1px;margin:1em 0;font-size:.9em; }\nth,td{ padding:5px;text-align:left;border:1px solid #aaa; }\nth{ font-weight:bold;background:#5d5d5d; }\n.symbol-link{font-weight:bold;}\n/* header{ border-bottom:1px solid #494756; } */\n.title{ margin:0 0 8px;line-height:1.3;color:#ddd; }\n.meta {color:#5e5c6d;font-size:13px;margin:0 0 .5em; }\na{text-decoration:none; color:#2a4b87;}\n.meta .head { display: inline-block; overflow: hidden}\n.head .h-thumb { width: 30px; height: 30px; margin: 0; padding: 0; border-radius: 50%; float: left;}\n.head .h-content { margin: 0; padding: 0 0 0 9px; float: left;}\n.head .h-name {font-size: 13px; color: #eee; margin: 0;}\n.head .h-time {font-size: 12.5px; color: #7E829C; margin: 0;}\n.small {font-size: 12.5px; display: inline-block; transform: scale(0.9); -webkit-transform: scale(0.9); transform-origin: left; -webkit-transform-origin: left;}\n.smaller {font-size: 12.5px; display: inline-block; transform: scale(0.8); -webkit-transform: scale(0.8); transform-origin: left; -webkit-transform-origin: left;}\n.bt-text {font-size: 12px;margin: 1.5em 0 0 0}\n.bt-text p {margin: 0}\n</style>\n</head>\n<body>\n<div class=\"wrapper\">\n<header>\n<h2 class=\"title\">\nThe most exciting \"research\"? \"Online celebrity AI Research Institute\": Public data missed 50% of Hormuz's real traffic\n</h2>\n<h4 class=\"meta\">\n<a class=\"head\" href=\"https://laohu8.com/wemedia/1084101182\">\n\n<div class=\"h-thumb\" style=\"background-image:url(https://static.tigerbbs.com/66809d1f5c2e43e2bdf15820c6d6897e);background-size:cover;\"></div>\n\n<div class=\"h-content\">\n<p class=\"h-name\">华尔街见闻 </p>\n<p class=\"h-time smaller\">2026-04-06 12:41</p>\n</div>\n</a>\n</h4>\n</header>\n<article>\n<p><html><head></head><body>The most \"exploded\" material in today's financial circle comes from an article about Hormuz<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/002320\">Straits</a>Front-line field reports of.</p><p>Citrini Research, a Research institution that used an AI \"thought experiment\" report \"Global Intelligence Crisis in 2028\" to set off a storm in the market and even \"collapsed\" the stock prices of a number of related companies, this time threw out a heavy geo-material. It has caused quite a shock among traders, shipping insurance and energy research circles for a simple reason: When the market debated whether the Strait was \"open or not, and whether it would suddenly close\", the report directly brought the discussion back to the scene.</p><p>The report featured the enigmatic \"Analyst#3\" of Citrini Research. Unlike the usual second-hand compilation, he chose to \"count ships\" near the strait in person, look at the channel, chat with locals and crew members, and record details of inspections, detentions and risks encountered along the way. Many readers' first reaction after reading it is: This is more like a battlefield reconnaissance log, not like a macro comment made in the office-it is also the impact that Citrini always \"brings the market back to reality with details\".</p><p>\"Analyst 3\" observed at the scene that the number of ships actually passing through the Strait of Hormuz was significantly higher than the level presented by the public AIS data, and that the market systematically underestimated the real flow. The key figure given in the report is glaring – \"AIS systems underreport approximately 50% of actual passing vessels per day in the current environment\".</p><p>More importantly, he describes the Straits status quo as a state of \"dynamic enforcement\": the Straits are not well-suited to be generalized with the \"open/closed\" binary label, because the field rules change, and so do the enforcers. The report wrote that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) dominated the new rule of \"who can pass\" on the spot, and patrol boats and Shahed drones were frequently active, which brought fluctuation risks to the global oil and gas supply chain may be amplified at any time.</p><p><div><h2>How to fill in the information blank: \"counting ships\" on the spot has become the most direct way</h2></div>The Strait of Hormuz is like a \"master valve\" for global energy.<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/USEG\">U.S. Energy</a>The Information Agency (EIA) has long estimated that the Strait of Hormuz carries a considerable proportion of the world's maritime crude oil and refined oil flow (often quoted as about 20%), and any news of \"misjudgment\" will quickly be reflected in oil prices, freight rates and insurance rates.</p><p>The problem is that the tools commonly used in the market — public AIS, partial satellite imagery, scattered anonymous intelligence — each have their own blind spots. Citrini gave a very straightforward judgment in the report: \"When there is a huge information gap in the market about whether the strait is 'open or closed', the only way to go to the site and count ships is the most direct and effective way.\" This explains why the report is concerned: it provides scarce first-hand observations at the expense of extremely high personal risk.</p><p><div><h2>'High-stakes forensics' from Dubai to Musandem</h2></div>Citrini's expedition route was written in detail: Dubai → Fujairah oil port → Musandem province (Khasab) in Oman → attempt to enter the core waters of the strait by speedboat. The value of this path is that it links the whole chain of \"port-supply-border enforcement-sea passage\" to observe, rather than just staring at the stretch of water in the middle of the strait.</p><p>Nor was he carrying gear like a normal business trip: a Leica Zoom camera, recording glasses, an EPIRB distress beacon, about $15,000 in cash, and he mentioned bringing a spare cell phone (including a<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/XIACY\">Millet</a>cell phones) as well as supplies such as Zyn. The report has an obvious on-the-spot tone, for example, he described the trip as \"like writing a research report into a waterproof bag\", ready to deal with seizures and emergencies.</p><p><div><h2>Key Discovery 1: AIS is \"half less\", and dark AIS and \"hidden corridor\" are filling in</h2></div>One of Citrini's biggest conclusions is a direct blow to AIS reliability. He wrote: \"The AIS system misreports about 50 percent of actual passing ships every day in the current environment, and the public data that the market relies on is no longer reliable.\" If AIS is analogized to navigational positioning on highways, it does show most vehicles, but when some vehicles are \"off-location\" or take small roads that are not marked by public maps, the screen looks empty.</p><p>At the scene, he observed more ships passing, especially the permitted channels that some ships chose to approach the Iranian coast, which he called \"hidden corridors\". Some of these vessels employ dark AIS (off signal) or do not rely entirely on public tracking systems. For trading and risk control, this means a practical problem: using public AIS to estimate \"whether the traffic has dropped sharply\" is likely to underestimate the real traffic, thus amplifying the panic or mismatch risk premium.</p><p>To prove this, BIMCO, a shipping industry organization, and some insurance and maritime notification channels (such as UKMTO's navigation safety notification system) have long reminded that in high-risk waters, whether AIS is turned on or not often obeys safety and avoidance strategies, and there are naturally deviations in public data. Citrini's contribution is that he quantifies this \"bias\" into a more impactful approximate proportion.</p><p><div><h2>Key finding two: IRGC-led 'dynamic enforcement', making the strait more like 'temporary traffic control'</h2></div>At the security and political level, the report emphasizes that the control logic of the Straits is changing. He wrote that the IRGC was on-site to develop and enforce new rules of passage, patrol boats were active with Shahed drones, and the strait was in a state of \"dynamic law enforcement\". To use a better understood metaphor, this is a bit like a key arterial road: the road is not blocked, but the traffic police set up temporary lanes, random inspections and release lists at any time, and the traffic experience and risk will fluctuate at the hourly level.</p><p>On sensitive issues, the report also leaves room for market understanding: some regional security professionals will think that tightening controls has its border security and deterrence needs; Shipping companies and traders are more concerned about the unpredictability caused by the temporary nature of rules, because what the supply chain fears most is not \"expensive\", but \"unsure when to get stuck\".</p><p><div><h2>Inspection, detention and \"signing a promise\": Why is this material expensive</h2></div>The most vivid part of the report happened at the border checkpoint in Oman. Citrini described being asked to sign a commitment to \"no photography, no journalism, no intelligence gathering\". He then took a GPS-free speedboat driven by a stranger. The report said that the speedboat was \"only 18 miles off the Iranian coast\" and even showed details of \"swimming and smoking cigars in the strait\" to illustrate how close he was to the real shipping channel and law enforcement.</p><p>The more dramatic part: He was intercepted, detained by the Oman Coast Guard, his phone confiscated, and notes and photos may have fallen into official hands. For readers, the significance of this kind of plot is not to hunt for curiosity, but to explain the fact that when data sources become more and more difficult and public information becomes more and more fragmented, the cost of first-hand observation is rising sharply, which will directly affect the information quality and pricing efficiency of the market.</p><p><div><h2>How should the market judge \"strait risk\" in the future?</h2></div>A common question is, what else can the market trust when public AIS is unreliable?</p><p>The more realistic answer: change \"single data source\" to \"multi-source puzzle\". Trading and risk control teams can cross-validate public AIS, commercial satellites (especially SAR, which is more night-and cloud-friendly), port handling and queuing data, insurance quotation changes, and official maritime notifications. Think of it as looking at the same intersection with multiple cameras. When one is blocked, the whole traffic flow can still be restored.</p><p>Another question is, how will this affect oil prices and shipping?</p><p>EIA and the International Energy Agency (IEA) and other institutions have repeatedly emphasized the importance of Hormuz. The risk premium often comes from the product of \"disruption probability × disruption impact\". Citrini's report boosts the market's understanding of the \"impact\" part: the strait is not showing a simple shutdown, the mode of passage is changing, the rules are more temporary, and the risks are more like \"<a href=\"https://laohu8.com/S/600668\">spike</a>Pulse \". Such risks are usually more sensitive to the transmission of option volatility, freight and insurance surcharges than to spot transactions.</p><p><div><h2>Volatility comes from 'unpredictable temporary rules'</h2></div>Citrini is cautious about the future: IRGC-led field rules will make the Straits more prone to sudden friction, and fluctuations in global oil supply chains may take on the characteristics of \"short, violent and difficult to verify\" more frequently. For markets, such environments will reward participants who respond quickly and have more three-dimensional information sources.</p><p>His advice is also clear: Don't take the Straits as a switch, don't take the AIS as the truth. The reason why the phrase \"go to the site and count ships\" in the report is shocking is that it reminds the market that when the information gap is large enough, risk control and research need to be closer to the ground reality, even if the cost is high and the risk is high.</p><p>In short, the core point of the report is,<strong>The real traffic of the Strait of Hormuz may be significantly higher than that shown by public AIS. The strait order is characterized by dynamic law enforcement. Any information of \"misjudging opening and closing\" may amplify the fluctuations of global energy and shipping chains.</strong></p><p>On the one hand, the market may need to recalibrate the \"flow-risk premium\" mapping; On the other hand, data methodologies can be forced to escalate from relying on a single publicly available metric to more expensive but more robust multi-source validation. For the trading, shipping and industrial side, such changes will push the \"information advantage\" to a more central position.</p><p></body></html></p>\n</article>\n</div>\n</body>\n</html>\n","type":0,"thumbnail":"https://community-static.tradeup.com/news/720622f3a00b611476f1d69c1f2cbf0d","relate_stocks":{"AGIX":"通用人工智能 ETF-AGIX","ARTY":"ISHARES FUTURE AI & TECH ETF","CHAT":"ROUNDHILL GENERATIVE AI & TECHNOLOGY ETF","AIPO":"Defiance AI and Power Infrastructure ETF"},"source_url":"https://wallstreetcn.com/articles/3769308","is_english":false,"share_image_url":"https://static.laohu8.com/e9f99090a1c2ed51c021029395664489","article_id":"2625819624","content_text":"今日金融圈最“炸”的一份材料,来自一篇关于霍尔木兹海峡的一线实地报告。\n之前曾用一篇 AI “思想实验”报告《2028 年全球智能危机》在市场上掀起风暴、甚至把一批相关公司股价“打崩”的研究机构 Citrini Research,这次又抛出了一份重磅地缘材料。它在交易员、航运保险和能源研究圈里引发了不小的震动,原因很简单:当市场争论海峡“到底开没开、会不会突然关”时,这份报告直接把讨论拉回了现场。\n报告主角是 Citrini Research 的神秘的“3号分析师”。与常见的二手汇编不同,他选择亲自去海峡附近“数船”、看航道、和当地人及船员聊天,并记录下沿途遇到的检查、扣留与风险细节。很多读者看完的第一反应是:这更像战地侦察日志,不像办公室里做出来的宏观评论——也正是 Citrini 一贯“用细节把市场拉回现实”的那种冲击感。\n“3号分析师”在现场观察到,实际通过霍尔木兹海峡的船只数量明显高于公开 AIS 数据所呈现的水平,市场对真实流量存在系统性低估。报告给出的关键数字很刺眼——“AIS 系统在当前环境下每天大约漏报 50% 的实际过往船舶”。\n更重要的是,他把海峡现状描述为一种“动态执法”的状态:海峡不太适合用“开放/封闭”二元标签概括,因为现场规则在变,执行者也在变。报告写道,伊朗革命卫队(IRGC)在现场主导“谁能通过”的新规矩,巡逻艇与 Shahed 无人机活动频繁,给全球油气供应链带来的波动风险随时可能放大。\n\n信息空白怎么填:现场“数船”成了最直接的办法\n\n霍尔木兹海峡对全球能源像一段“总阀门”。美国能源信息署(EIA)长期估算,霍尔木兹海峡承载全球相当比例的海运原油与成品油流量(常被引用在约两成上下的量级),任何“误判开合”的消息都会迅速体现在油价、运价与保险费率上。\n问题在于,市场常用的工具——公开 AIS、部分卫星图、零散的匿名情报——各有盲区。Citrini 在报告里给了句很直白的判断:“当市场对海峡‘到底是开放还是封闭’存在巨大信息空白时,只有去现场数船才是最直接有效的途径。”这也解释了这份报告为什么会引发关注:它提供了稀缺的第一手观测,而代价是极高的个人风险。\n\n从迪拜到穆桑代姆的“高风险取证”\n\nCitrini 的考察路线被写得很细:迪拜 → 富查伊拉油港 → 阿曼穆桑代姆省(Khasab)→ 试图乘快艇进入海峡核心水域。这条路径的价值在于,它把“港口—补给—边境执法—海上通行”这一整套链条串起来观察,而不仅盯着海峡中线那一段水域。\n他携带的装备也不像普通出差:徕卡变焦相机、录音眼镜、EPIRB 求救信标、约 1.5 万美元现金,还提到带了备用手机(包括一部小米手机)以及 Zyn 等补给。报告里带有明显的现场口吻,比如他形容这趟行程“像把研究报告写进了防水袋里”,随时准备应对扣押与突发状况。\n\n关键发现一:AIS“少了一半”,暗 AIS 与“隐藏走廊”在补位\n\nCitrini 最重磅的结论之一,是对 AIS 可靠性的直接打击。他写道:“AIS 系统在当前环境下每天大约漏报 50% 的实际过往船舶,市场依赖的公开数据已不可靠。”如果把 AIS 类比成高速公路的导航定位,它确实能显示大多数车辆,但当一部分车“关定位”或走了不被公开地图标注的小路,屏幕上看起来就会空一大片。\n他在现场观察到更多船舶通行,尤其是一些船选择靠近伊朗海岸的许可通道,被他称作“隐藏走廊”。其中一部分船舶采用暗 AIS(关闭信号)或不完全依赖公开跟踪系统。对于交易与风控来说,这意味着一个现实问题:用公开 AIS 估算“流量是否锐减”,很可能把真实通行量低估,从而放大恐慌或错配风险溢价。\n为佐证这一点,航运行业机构 BIMCO、以及部分保险与海事通报渠道(例如 UKMTO 的航行安全通报体系)长期都提醒过:在高风险海域,AIS 的开启与否常常服从安全与规避策略,公开数据天然存在偏差。Citrini 的贡献在于,他把这种“偏差”量化成了一个更具冲击力的近似比例。\n\n关键发现二:IRGC 主导的“动态执法”,让海峡更像“临时交通管制”\n\n在安全与政治层面,报告强调海峡的控制逻辑正在变化。他写道,IRGC 在现场制定并执行新的通行规则,巡逻艇与 Shahed 无人机频繁活动,海峡处于“动态执法”状态。用更好理解的比喻来说,这有点像一条关键干道:路没有封死,但交警随时设置临时车道、抽检、放行名单,通行体验与风险会在小时级别波动。\n在敏感议题上,报告也给市场留出了理解空间:一部分地区安全人士会认为加强管制有其边境安全与威慑需求;航运公司与贸易商更关心的是规则临时性带来的不可预测性,因为供应链最怕的不是“贵”,而是“说不准什么时候卡住”。\n\n检查、扣留与“签承诺”:为什么说这份材料代价高\n\n报告里最具现场感的一段,发生在阿曼边境检查站。Citrini 描述自己被要求签署“不摄影、不从事新闻、不收集情报”的承诺。随后,他又搭乘陌生人驾驶的无 GPS 快艇,报告写道快艇“距离伊朗海岸仅 18 英里”,甚至出现“在海峡里游泳、抽雪茄”的细节,用来说明他离真实航道与执法力量有多近。\n更戏剧性的部分是:他被阿曼海岸警卫队拦截、扣留,手机被没收,笔记和照片可能已落入官方之手。对读者来说,这类情节的意义不在猎奇,而在解释一个事实:当数据源越来越难、公开信息越来越碎,第一手观察的成本正在急剧上升,这会直接影响市场的信息质量与定价效率。\n\n市场今后该怎么判断“海峡风险”?\n\n一个常见问题是,既然公开 AIS 不可靠,市场还能信什么?\n较现实的答案是:把“单一数据源”改成“多源拼图”。交易与风控团队可以把公开 AIS、商业卫星(尤其是 SAR 对夜间与云层更友好)、港口装卸与排队数据、保险报价变化、以及官方海事通报交叉验证。把它想成用多台摄像头看同一个路口,某一台被遮挡时,整体仍能还原车流大势。\n另一个问题是,这会怎样影响油价与航运?\nEIA 与国际能源署(IEA)等机构反复强调过霍尔木兹的重要性,风险溢价往往来自“中断概率×中断影响”的乘积。Citrini 的报告提升了市场对“影响”部分的理解:海峡并未呈现简单停摆,通行方式在变化,规则更临时,风险更像“尖峰脉冲”。这类风险对期权波动率、运费与保险附加费的传导,通常比对现货成交更敏感。\n\n波动来自“不可预测的临时规则”\n\nCitrini 对未来的判断偏谨慎:IRGC 主导的现场规则将使海峡更容易出现突发摩擦,全球石油供应链的波动可能更频繁地呈现“短促、剧烈、难验证”的特征。对市场而言,这类环境会奖励反应快与信息源更立体的参与者。\n他的建议也很明确:别把海峡当成开关,别把 AIS 当成真相。报告里那句“去现场数船”之所以震撼,是因为它提醒市场:当信息缺口足够大时,风控与研究需要更接近地面现实,哪怕代价高、风险大。\n总之报告的核心观点就是,霍尔木兹海峡的真实通行量可能显著高于公开 AIS 所示,海峡秩序呈现动态执法特征,任何“误判开合”的信息都可能放大全球能源与航运链条的波动。\n一方面,市场可能需要重新校准“流量—风险溢价”的映射;另一方面,数据方法论会被迫升级,从依赖单一公开指标,转向更昂贵但更稳健的多源验证。对交易、航运与产业端来说,这类变化会把“信息优势”推到更核心的位置。","news_type":1,"symbols_score_info":{"AGIX":1.5,"AIPO":1.5,"ARTY":1.5,"CHAT":1.5}},"isVote":1,"tweetType":1,"viewCount":218,"authorTweetTopStatus":1,"verified":2,"comments":[],"imageCount":0,"langContent":"EN","totalScore":0}],"lives":[]}