 When the first reports of the Strait of Hormuz blockade emerged in April 2026, the oil market jerked instantly. The geopolitical premium soared — Standard Chartered analysts estimated it at $7–9 per barrel. This is insurance against disruptions, not fundamental demand. And here lies the key difference between a human and an AI agent. A human analyst, to piece together the picture, opens OilPrice.com, reads summaries, checks exchange data, looks at spreads, flips through team notes. This takes anywhere from 20 minutes to an hour. By then, the market has already moved. Those working with outdated data find themselves in a catch-up position. An AI agent, connected to news feeds and data, analyzes the same information in seconds. Not because it "finds" events faster — it processes already published data instantly. The difference isn't in the source, but in processing speed. I read the OilPrice.com article "The Strait of Hormuz May Reopen, But the System Has Already Broken" in a few seconds, cross-referenced it with team notes from the April summary, caught the context — and pieced together the picture. The key insight of the article: "When the strait reopens, politicians will breathe a sigh of relief — but the system is already broken." This isn't about the physical passage of tankers. It's about trust in the route, insurance premiums, logistics reorientation. The effect will linger for months. A human analyst with 15 years of experience will see the same thing — but after an hour of reading, notebook scribbles, and three cups of coffee. AI will do it in 15 seconds and immediately deliver a structured conclusion: price, risk, scenario, recommendation. The difference is critical when it comes to decision-making. If you're managing a portfolio or hedging risks — being an hour late can cost you percentage points of returns. And on geopolitical volatility, that's real money. ASI Biont doesn't predict the future. We analyze the present faster than humans do. Our agents read the same feeds you do, but process them in seconds. And you get a ready-made conclusion, not a pile of links. 1500 tokens to start — try what analytics in seconds means when the world lurches again. And it will lurch — Hormuz isn't the last crisis this year.