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Iran Conflict 2026
26MAY

Brent prints $112.10 conflict high, reverses

3 min read
08:44UTC

Brent crude settled $112.10 on 18 May, the highest conflict-era close, then fell to $110.98 on 19 May as no executive order, OFAC general licence or White House statement followed Tasnim's sanctions-waiver report.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Brent paid $1.12 for waiting one session to see if Trump's post would produce paper.

Brent Crude settled at $112.10 per barrel on 18 May 2026 on ICE Futures, the highest conflict-era close on record, Trading Economics data showed. The benchmark slipped to $110.98 on 19 May after no US executive order, OFAC general licence or White House statement followed the Tasnim sanctions-waiver report from the previous session 1.

The arc plots cleanly. Brent had been at $104.21 on 11 May , rose to $109.30 on 16 May , reached $110.30 on 18 May as ADNOC committed to doubling Fujairah throughput, and then jumped a further $1.80 to the conflict-era $112.10 print after the Trump hold-off post and the Tasnim waiver leak landed within the same trading window. The single-session reversal to $110.98 came when neither the cancelled-strike post nor the waiver text produced a corroborating document on the US side.

The asymmetry matters because of what oil traders actually bid into. ICE Brent prices the most concrete piece of paper available; a Truth Social post is parsed, but it is not signed. The $112.10 print is, on the data, the moment the market accepted a presidential utterance and an Iranian state-media leak as policy. The $110.98 settle the next day is the moment it withdrew that acceptance after waiting one session for confirming text. The spread of $1.12 between the two settles is the implied price of unverified US-side claims, which is the same spread now passing through into European petrol pumps and shipping insurance, with no Iranian or US action in between to justify it.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Oil hit its highest price since the conflict began on 18 May $112.10 a barrel after Trump posted that he had cancelled a planned strike on Iran. The next day it fell back to $110.98 when no official US documents appeared to confirm the strike had ever been scheduled. This price swing matters because the cost of a barrel of oil feeds into the price of petrol, diesel, heating oil and anything transported by lorry or ship. A $1 move in Brent crude typically translates to about half a penny per litre at the petrol pump within two to three weeks.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The $112.10-to-$110.98 reversal has two separable drivers.

First, the absent OFAC general licence. OFAC issues general licences before major Iran actions to protect US persons and financial institutions transacting in adjacent markets. Zero Iran OFAC general licences were issued on 18-19 May; professional oil traders use this absence as a leading indicator that the stated action is not operationally imminent.

Second, the Tasnim sanctions-waiver report, which drove part of the 18 May spike, originated with Iran's state-adjacent news agency and was not confirmed by any US-side document. Brent had already absorbed a similar cycle in March Trump post, spike, no instrument, partial reversal and the 19 May reversal is faster and larger than the March cycle, suggesting the learning curve is steepening.

Escalation

The price action is a mirror of the political action: volatile but contained within a structural floor driven by real supply disruption. Neither the spike to $112.10 nor the reversal to $110.98 changes the IEA's assessment that the market remains in deficit through Q4 2026 even if Hormuz flows resume in June.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Professional oil traders now apply a documentary-verification discount to Trump's Iran Truth Social posts the 19 May reversal was faster and larger than the March cycle, indicating a steepening learning curve.

    Immediate · 0.78
  • Risk

    If a genuine military escalation produces a Truth Social post that markets treat as noise, the price signal that historically triggers de-escalation pressure on both sides will arrive late or not at all.

    Short term · 0.65
  • Consequence

    The structural Brent floor $10-12 above pre-conflict levels persists regardless of verbal-signal noise because the IEA has confirmed 1 billion barrels of cumulative supply loss.

    Long term · 0.82
First Reported In

Update #102 · Iran signs Hormuz toll; Trump posts a cancelled strike

Trading Economics / ICE Futures· 19 May 2026
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Different Perspectives
Global shipping and insurance markets
Global shipping and insurance markets
Lloyd's Joint Hull Committee held Hormuz war-risk at $10-14 million per voyage on 26 May, requiring a signed government instrument or UNSC resolution before acting. Futures traders repriced Brent 1.63% on the Bandar Abbas strike; insurers did not move because no qualifying document has been produced in 87 days.
Pakistan
Pakistan
Pakistan's army-chief channel relayed the draft MOU to Tehran and backs Iran's framing that the ball is in Washington's court. Islamabad's general-officer corps now holds structural authority over the deal's critical text, having extracted the only substantive nuclear-monitoring concession of the war; legitimising this channel is itself a strategic choice Washington has not publicly affirmed.
China
China
Chinese DPI hardware arrived in Iran for a tiered censorship system, while China's NFRA ordered state banks to halt new lending to five sanctioned refiners after GL V expired. Beijing is simultaneously exporting surveillance infrastructure to Tehran and adjusting sanctions exposure to US pressure.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
Riyadh signed the IMO letter rejecting Iran's Hormuz toll system and requested Trump stand down the 19 May strike alongside the Qatari Emir and UAE President. Saudi Aramco has already warned that Hormuz normalcy is delayed to 2027; at $87 per barrel as Riyadh's budget breakeven, every month of war-risk insurance premium erodes the fiscal cushion the crown prince requires.
Qatar
Qatar
Doha hosted Iranian negotiators, holds $12 billion in frozen Iranian assets Tehran has named as a Hormuz precondition, and signed the five-Gulf-state IMO letter rejecting Iran's PGSA transit route on the same week. Qatar cannot release the assets without a Washington order and cannot credibly claim neutrality after the IMO signature; it is covering both outcomes rather than bridging them.
Israel
Israel
Prime Minister Netanyahu called Trump on 24 May to object that the Lebanon war-end clause inside the draft MOU would force Israel to wind down its campaign against Hezbollah. His objection gives Jerusalem an effective veto over text Washington and Tehran had otherwise largely settled, without Israel being a party to the deal.