Brent Crude front-month settled at $101.29 a barrel on Sunday 10 May, OilPrice.com data showed 1. The price moved $0.09 across three sessions through the doctrinal statement from Mohammad Mokhber, the bulk carrier strike off Doha, and the IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) commander's statement that missiles and drones targeting US positions are awaiting authorisation. The structural Hormuz premium floor at $101 identified the previous week holds; for traders, the negotiating continuation is the dominant signal and the kinetic widening is already in the price.
Three weekend shocks that would have moved the market by $5 to $10 a year ago now move it by less than a dime. That is the signature of a repriced market, not a calm one. Traders have absorbed the blockade as a structural feature and are pricing the negotiation as a ceiling, not a reopening: $101 is the new bottom while Iran controls the strait, and any move higher would need a confirmed ceasefire trigger or an IRGC strike on US naval assets to deliver. Neither is in the December futures curve.
US gasoline at $4.54 a gallon reflects the same floor at the consumer end; UK forecourt prices land at roughly £1.50 to £1.55 a litre once duty and VAT are added; European refiners are absorbing more of the shock through compressed margins, which is why Continental pump prices have not yet moved as hard as the US ones. The structural cost is being distributed by jurisdiction rather than by barrel, with the lightest-tax jurisdictions feeling the chokepoint hardest at the till.
The macro consequence is that the floor is now self-reinforcing. With Brent stuck above $100, Saudi Arabia clears its $87 fiscal breakeven comfortably, removing the budgetary pressure that would normally push Riyadh to advocate for OPEC+ production hikes. The UAE clears its $76 breakeven by an even wider margin. The Gulf producers benefiting financially from the chokepoint they are diplomatically trying to reopen face a structural conflict of interest that the market has now priced as the base case.
