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Court documents show that Trader Mercuria has sued Baltic Exchange for losses incurred by the Hormuz cargo, according to a court filing.

A court filing revealed that commodity trader Mercuria has sued the Baltic Exchange - the top provider of shipping benchmark indices in the world - for losses caused by data on oil tanker prices which did not take into account the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

The U.S. and Israeli 'war' with Iran began on February 28. Since then, hundreds of ships have been stranded in the Gulf. 20,000 seafarers are unable to pass through the crucial chokepoints. Only a handful of ships will make the journeys every day.

In a filing dated April 30, and submitted via England's High Court,?Mercuria – one of the top energy and commodities traders in the world - stated that the Baltic Exchange continues to publish its benchmark 'crude tanker' index, known by the code TD3C despite the closure of the strait.

The TD3C is based upon?voyages between the Gulf and China.

Mercuria stated that the result was "ongoing extreme volatility" in the TD3C pricing, which did not accurately?or reliable represent the underlying markets it was intended to measure. This had distorted the shipping and freight derivatives markets, which rely on this index.

Freight forward contracts allow investors to make positions on future freight rates.

Mercuria, a Baltic Exchange customer, claimed that the exchange "breached the contractual and/or legal duties mentioned above" by not suspending the benchmark.

It caused Mercuria, and its affiliates to suffer losses on physical freight contracts as well as settled derivative freight contracts benchmarked against TD3C.

The filing stated that while such losses were yet to be quantified they "were currently estimated to be in the hundreds of millions of U.S. dollar."

Mercuria has declined to comment about?Friday.

The London-based Baltic?Exchange is owned by Singapore’s SGX and produces daily benchmark rates, indices and a range of other indices used to settle and trade freight?contracts around the world. They declined to comment.

One Baltic member, and active user of 'the TD3C Route,' who declined to name themselves due to the sensitive nature of the issue, stated that the exchange acted in accordance with its benchmark guidelines and regulation?and advised the market as to?how Middle East Gulf route would be assessed during conflict.

Since the beginning of the war, The Baltic has conducted market consultations and offered an alternative benchmark. (Reporting and editing by Tomaszjanowski, Dmitry Zhdannikov and Jonathan Saul)

(source: Reuters)