Brent Crude settled at $108.17 on Friday 1 May, down $14.83 from the 30 April $123.00 close 1. The drop is the largest single-session decline since hostilities began on 28 February, equivalent in absolute terms to the spike that followed the United Arab Emirates OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) exit , running in reverse. Donald Trump rejected Iran's proposal from the White House the same afternoon: 'They're asking for things I can't agree to' 2.
For roughly six trading hours on Friday, markets priced the fourth proposal as a credible ceasefire path, applying a textbook ceasefire-probability discount to the war premium. Trump's rejection partly repriced the premium back in, but Brent did not return to $123, which means the next Iranian text enters the market with a larger residual ceasefire discount baked in than the last one did. The price layer has now rated Iran's proposals as more credible than the President has rated them on four out of four occasions.
The OPEC+ Seven 206,000 barrels-per-day June increase had been holding the prior settle in place. Saudi fiscal arithmetic at $108 still favours leaving that increase on the calendar: Riyadh's $87 fiscal breakeven holds with $21 of headroom. A sustained move below $100 would change the calculation, because the volume increase only stays attractive while the price stays above the level at which the budget tips into deficit. The 1 May session put Brent within a single comparable move of that threshold.
The pattern across all four Iranian proposals of the war is one-directional: each text has produced a Brent move toward de-escalation. Each presidential rejection has produced a smaller reversal in the opposite direction. The market is treating Iranian texts as the leading indicator and US verbal responses as the lagging one, and a fifth proposal that moves price the same way will turn the divergence from a tendency into a structural feature of how the war is priced.
