In the early hours of 30 June, Donald Trump ordered US petrol retailers on Truth Social to cut prices to $2.50 a gallon "IMMEDIATELY" or face "big problems", claiming oil sat at "$68 and heading south" 1. No executive order, no price directive and no signed federal action accompanied the post 2. It was his only Iran-adjacent move in the three days to 1 July.
A direct read of The White House presidential-actions register shows nothing signed on Iran, sanctions or the Middle East between 29 June and 1 July 3. Trump's "$68" also undershoots the market: Brent Crude settled at $72.91 on 29 June , and the gap reflects the usual spread with West Texas Intermediate, the US benchmark he was most likely citing. Petrol retailers have no legal duty to hit a price named in a social-media post, so the post moves rhetoric, not policy.
Brent opened the third quarter flat to lower, trading in a $71.74 to $73.20 band against that settle 45. The barrels, meanwhile, keep reaching China under the one Iran instrument Washington has actually signed, General License X . United Against Nuclear Iran, a US advocacy group tracking Iranian tanker movements, counted 37 tankers and more than $4 billion of Iranian oil revenue since the memorandum by 30 June, up from 31 tankers and $3.5 billion on 24 June 6. That is roughly one tanker a day, a steady pace the licence underwrites while the petrol post changes nothing at the pump.
