
A resolution of the US-Iran conflict could unlock a near-term economic opportunity worth up to $20bn for Pakistan.
This positions the country as one of the largest relative beneficiaries among emerging markets if a phased settlement is signed and the Strait of Hormuz reopens to commercial traffic.
The opportunity spans six measurable channels: a 75-150 basis points country risk re-rating, foreign exchange reserves rebuilding beyond $20bn, and approximately $4bn in GCC export recovery.
Furthermore, inflation normalization of 125-150 bps as oil prices ease, a current account swing to surplus of $3.75-5bn annually, and the restoration of Saudi Vision 2030 labour demand for 700,000-800,000 Pakistani workers each year.
According to a research report by KTrade Securities, Pakistan finds itself at a rare geopolitical inflection point as the sole credible intermediary in Iran-US negotiations, with the potential to transform a costly regional crisis into a strategic and economic windfall.
The report maps out how the conflict has already inflicted measurable damage on the Pakistani economy before tracing the full scope of recovery and structural gains that a peace deal could set in motion.
The Hormuz closure cost Pakistan an estimated $10-14bn, equivalent to 2-3% of GDP.
It pushed CPI to 11.7% in May 2026, swung the current account into deficit, and forced the State Bank of Pakistan to raise its policy rate by 100 basis points in April 2026.
Even after a settlement, the report warns that the Strait remains a structural risk.
Existing bypass options, the East-West Pipeline and the Habshan-Fujairah Pipeline, carry a combined capacity of roughly 8.5 million barrels per day.
It is far short of the 20 million barrels that transit the Strait daily, leaving global energy flows without a credible alternative if the corridor closes again.
This gap has elevated Gwadar’s strategic profile considerably. Located outside the Hormuz chokepoint, the port remains accessible even during naval blockades or sustained maritime disruption.
Container throughput at Gwadar surged to 11,000 TEUs in April 2026 alone, exceeding the full-year 2025 total of 8,300 TEUs.
The report estimates that sustained volumes at April 2026 levels could generate $50-80 million annually in port handling fees, supplemented by transit dues, transshipment charges, and Special Economic Zone revenues.
Saudi Arabia, having watched its onshore storage fill rapidly during the closure, is now planning new oil storage facilities at Gwadar and transferred $2bn to Pakistan in April 2026, with a further $3bn pledged, a direct financial acknowledgment that Gwadar’s operational readiness serves Gulf interests.
Pakistan-Iran bilateral trade is a second major opportunity. Trade between the two countries peaked at $1.32bn in 2008-09 before international sanctions on Tehran caused a sharp decline.
A sanctions-free corridor would revive flows across several categories.
The report values the near-term trade potential with Iran at $2bn, with additional upside from Pakistan’s cement sector supplying reconstruction material, given that an estimated 42,000-45,000 civilian structures were damaged or destroyed in the joint US-Israeli military campaign.
Historical export and import flows between the two countries are captured in the table below.
Pakistan-Iran Trade: Key Commodity Flows
| Potential Pakistan Exports to Iran | Potential Iran Exports to Pakistan |
| Rice and Meat | Organic Chemicals |
| Construction Material (Cement etc.) | Plastics and Plastic Articles |
| Textiles and Fabric | Petroleum and Oil Products |
| Fruits (Mangoes, Oranges), Sesame Seeds and Chickpeas | Iron and steel |
| Surgical and Medical Goods | Cheap Energy Supply |
The Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline, commonly known as the Peace Pipeline, represents a third structural gain.
The pipeline is designed to deliver up to 750 million cubic feet of natural gas per day from Iran’s South Pars field.
Pakistan currently imports 863-914 MMcfd of LNG from Qatar at approximately $13 per MMBtu.
Pipeline gas from Iran is estimated at $6-8 per MMBtu, yielding an estimated annual saving of $1.5-2.0bn.
The Iranian section spanning 1,100km was completed in 2013.
Pakistan’s 780km section from the Iranian border to Nawab Shah remains largely unbuilt, primarily due to US sanctions.
The current construction status of the pipeline is detailed in the table below.
Iran-Pakistan Gas Pipeline: Construction Status
| Section | Length | Status |
| Within Iran | 1,100 km | Completed (2013) |
| Pak-Border to Gwadar (Phase 1) | 80 km | In Progress |
| Gwadar to Balochistan Interior | 585 km | Not Built |
| Balochistan to Nawab Shah | 115 km | Not Built |
| Total | 1,880 km | ~58% Complete |
At equivalent import volumes and a conservative gas price midpoint of $7 per MMBtu versus $13 per MMBtu for LNG, Pakistan would pay roughly $2.2bn per year through the pipeline compared to $3.6-4.1bn at current LNG rates, as the comparison below illustrates.
LNG vs Iran-Pakistan Pipeline: Cost Comparison
| Current LNG Imports | Iran-Pakistan Pipeline | |
| Volume (MMcfd) | ~900 | ~750 |
| Gas Price (US$/MMBtu) | ~13 | ~6-8 (estimated) |
| Annual Import Cost (US$ bn) | ~3.6-4.1 | 1.5-2.2 |
| Infrastructure Cost (US$ bn) | ~3 | 1.5 |
The Pakistan-Saudi Arabia Strategic Mutual Defence Agreement, formally signed on September 17, 2025, at the Al Yamamah Palace in Riyadh by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, adds a $15bn near-term line item to the peace dividend.
This makes it the single largest component.
The agreement commits Pakistan to deploying 25,000 troops structured across four army brigades, two air force squadrons and two naval fleets to Saudi soil.
In exchange, the deal is anchored by a $10bn Saudi investment package targeting Pakistan’s infrastructure, energy, mining and domestic defence production sectors, with the bilateral trade target to be tripled from $5bn to $15bn annually.
The core terms of the agreement are summarized below.
Pakistan-Saudi Arabia Strategic Mutual Defence Agreement: Key Terms
| Aspect | Detail |
| Saudi Investment Package | $10bn across infrastructure, energy, mining, and defense sectors |
| Bilateral Trade Target | Tripled from $5bn to $15bn annually |
| Pakistan’s Military Commitment | 25,000 troops: 4 army brigades, 2 air force squadrons, 2 naval fleets |
| Previous Saudi Support | $3bn loan renewed December 2024; $1.5bn (2014) and $4.2bn (2018) bailout packages |
CPEC extends the opportunity further north and west. With planned investment growing from $46bn at its 2015 launch to $62bn through FY2030, the corridor’s road and rail infrastructure can give Iran immediate access to Chinese markets.
Iran has expressed readiness to formally join CPEC, which would create a southeastern transport corridor diversifying China’s route to West Asia and Europe, and, over the longer term, connect Gwadar to Russia and Northern Europe via the International North-South Transport Corridor.
Pakistan’s total trade with Central Asia currently stands at only $429 million, showcasing the scale of untapped potential.
Pakistan’s mediation role has also elevated its standing with the European Union. At the 8th Pakistan-EU Strategic Dialogue, the EU explicitly acknowledged Pakistan’s constructive facilitation role in brokering a ceasefire.
The report notes this diplomatic capital can be translated into trade concessions under the GSP+ framework and accelerated bilateral investment discussions.
Pakistan’s exports to the EU stood at $8.8bn in FY25, with a GSP+ preference utilization rate of 87.9%. The 9th dialogue session is scheduled for Brussels in 2027.
On markets, the KSE-100 Index retains meaningful re-rating headroom, sitting 12% below its January 2026 peak.
A Brent reversion from approximately $100 per barrel to $80 per barrel would normalize headline CPI, potentially returning it to the 5-7% target band by Q4 2026 and enabling a resumption of the rate-cut cycle.
If Pakistan can match its geographic advantage with competitive port charges, efficient customs clearance and reliable security guarantees, the structural gains unlocked by the peace deal could prove durable well beyond the immediate recovery window.

Reference Link:- https://mettisglobal.news/USIran-peace-could-be-Pakistans-20bn-moment-60847
