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European Tech Sovereignty
3JUN

Brent recovers to $93.91 on deal delay

3 min read
10:43UTC

Brent crude opened Monday at $93.91, up 3.06%, holding above last week's floor and keeping its forward curve above spot, the market's verdict that the unsigned weekend was a delay rather than a rupture.

TechnologyAssessed
Key takeaway

Brent's forward curve sits above spot, pricing sub-$100 oil as a temporary deal premium, not a new floor.

Brent Crude opened Monday 1 June at $93.91, up 3.06% from Friday's $91.12 close 1. Brent is the global oil benchmark against which most of the world's crude is priced, and its level encodes how seriously traders rate the risk that the strait of Hormuz closes. Monday's move recovered part of last week's losses without breaking either way: no collapse toward $90, no deal-failure surge toward $110.

The price held above the $92.05 floor set on 29 May , the bottom of a sell-off that ranked as Brent's worst monthly fall since the Covid shock. Holding that floor tells you the market read the unsigned weekend as a delay, not a rupture, the same reading that pulled Brent below $100 in late May as diplomatic optimism built .

The signal worth reading sits in the shape of the curve, not the spot price. The 12-month forward near $105 still sits above spot, which means traders are paying more for oil a year out than for oil today. That inversion prices sub-$100 Brent as a temporary deal premium, the discount the market awards while a settlement looks likely, rather than a new structural level. If the talks collapse, the premium unwinds and spot chases the forward upward; for now the curve says the deal is late, not dead.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Oil traders pushed Brent crude to $93.91 a barrel on 1 June, a 3% jump from Friday's close. Oil had been falling for weeks as traders hoped a US-Iran deal would reopen the Strait of Hormuz to shipping, but no deal arrived over the weekend. Futures contracts for oil a year from now price at around $105, roughly $11 above today's spot price. That $11 gap represents the market's estimate of the economic cost of the current blockade: traders are still pricing in an eventual reopening.

What could happen next?
  • Opportunity

    The $11-13 spread between spot and 12-month forward Brent means any credible deal announcement would produce an immediate oil-price fall that delivers significant household cost relief across Europe and Asia.

  • Risk

    If the 2 June House vote on SJ Res 59 passes, oil traders may interpret it as signalling an imminent end to the US blockade regardless of the Iran deal status, triggering a Brent sell-off that would undercut US leverage in the MOU negotiations.

First Reported In

Update #114 · Two parliaments, one war neither can govern

Trading Economics· 1 Jun 2026
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Different Perspectives
European Central Bank
European Central Bank
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United States (Ambassador Andrew Puzder / Steptoe LLP)
United States (Ambassador Andrew Puzder / Steptoe LLP)
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France (G7 chair and Mistral AI)
France (G7 chair and Mistral AI)
France chaired the 29 May G7 Bercy ministerial and produced a communique that omitted cloud sovereignty entirely, while its national AI champion Mistral won five-year Airbus and BMW engineering contracts commercially the day before. Paris is advancing sovereignty through the market and retreating on it at every multilateral table.
Germany (federal government)
Germany (federal government)
Berlin maintained College silence that forced CAIDA's scope to public-sector tenders, protecting the automotive sector from a US Section 301 claim while simultaneously allowing BMW to contract Mistral for safety-critical crash-simulation work. German corporate procurement and German trade policy are running in opposite directions.
Netherlands (minister Willemijn Aerdts)
Netherlands (minister Willemijn Aerdts)
Aerdts blocked Kyndryl's EUR 100m Solvinity acquisition on 26 May, the first US deal ever stopped under Dutch screening, on the specific ground that the US CLOUD Act could compel disclosure of DigiD and MijnOverheid data. The decision is a direct demonstration that national screening achieves CAIDA's public-sector objective without waiting for EU law.
European Commission
European Commission
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