Brent Crude settled at $101.70 on Monday 4 May before the IRGC opened fire on Project Freedom, then surged nearly 6 per cent to $114.44 intraday as the kinetic exchange unfolded and Fujairah was struck 1. The Trump pause on Tuesday 5 May reversed most of that move; Brent settled at $109.87. By Wednesday 6 May the price drifted to $108.51 2. Net change from Monday's opening settlement: +$6.81. The market priced the kinetic exchange at $12 per barrel; the verbal pause walked back only $5 of it.
A $6.81 move on Brent translates to roughly 1 to 2 pence per litre at British pumps within four to six weeks if the premium holds. The price action confirms the deeds-versus-words asymmetry the briefing has tracked since the UAE walkout from OPEC on Friday 1 May . Kinetic action moves the curve fast; verbal action partially walks it back. Goldman Sachs and Lloyd's P&I clubs had estimated a single Project Freedom escort contact would recover $15 to $20 per barrel; the outcome landed near the lower bound, suggesting the market reads the pause as a credible attempt at de-escalation rather than a tactical retreat.
OPEC+ added 206 thousand barrels per day for June into a market already absorbing the loss of Iranian export capacity and the closure of Hormuz transit, exposing the asymmetry in the underlying supply curve. The cartel's decision to add barrels into a bullish kinetic backdrop, days before the UAE walkout, established the supply-side ceiling against which the kinetic premium is now pricing.
