According to www.pymnts.com, the Middle East conflict — specifically the war in Iran — is severely disrupting global freight routes, particularly around the Strait of Hormuz, where non-Iranian sea traffic has fallen to near standstill due to ship attacks and heightened security risks.
Geopolitical Shockwaves Reshape Trade Corridors
The conflict is also disrupting aviation corridors over the Middle East, forcing route closures affecting major logistics hubs including Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Doha. As a direct result, air freight rates have risen over 70% on some impacted trade corridors. These disruptions extend beyond energy supply chains to critical high-value goods such as electronics and pharmaceuticals.
Paper-Based Processes Lag Behind Real-Time Needs
Traditional paper-based trade processes — including physical bills of lading, inspection certificates, and letters of credit — are proving inadequate. These documents often move via courier networks rather than digital platforms, creating critical delays when rerouting shipments. In contrast, companies with integrated digital trade infrastructure can respond to disruptions within hours; those relying on manual coordination may require days.
- The first exporter relies on traditional paperwork and manual coordination among banks, insurers, and logistics providers.
- The second operates through a digital trade platform where documentation, compliance checks, and financing are integrated.
- When rerouting is required, the digital operator can amend documentation electronically, update insurers, and adjust financing terms in near real time — while the manual operator faces multi-day coordination across institutions.
Working Capital Strain Intensifies
Longer transit times tie up inventory in containers, aircraft holds, or temporary storage — increasing working capital requirements. Companies must finance inventory for longer periods while still meeting supplier payment obligations. For smaller exporters and suppliers operating with thin margins, this strain is especially acute.
The 2025–2026 Growth Corporates Working Capital Index: Research Report Data Book, a PYMNTS Intelligence report commissioned by Visa, states that innovations like virtual cards, dynamic discounting platforms, supply chain finance programs, and embedded payment networks enable firms to extend payment cycles while ensuring suppliers receive early cash access through financing mechanisms.
Insurance, Routing, and Financial Infrastructure Adapt
Shipping companies are avoiding risk by altering routes or canceling port calls — breaking down the ‘delicate choreography’ of container repositioning. Port bottlenecks and equipment shortages follow. Meanwhile, war risk insurance costs have surged as geopolitical tensions rise. Banks and insurers are responding by integrating digital tools: automated compliance checks, digital identity verification, and electronic documentation reduce transaction approval times. Freight visibility and real-time logistics data are transforming trade finance — making the speed of information movement as vital as the speed of goods.
Source: www.pymnts.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










