Iran’s deputy foreign minister rejects claims Tehran would quit its nuclear programme for an attractive US offer

    by VT Markets
    /
    Mar 5, 2026
    Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Majid Takht-Ravanchi denied reports that Iran is willing to abandon its nuclear programme if the United States offers a rewarding alternative. News18 reported this, citing Iran’s state-run IRNA, and said the information could not be confirmed immediately. Takht-Ravanchi said the comments in question relate to “earlier talks with the US” about the nuclear deal. The report did not add further detail on what was discussed.

    Oil Rebounds On Renewed Geopolitical Risk

    After the clarification, WTI oil recovered earlier losses. It rebounded to about $76.15. We are now seeing the geopolitical risk premium, which had softened markets, being priced back into oil. After a period of relative calm that saw Brent crude trade in a tight $72-$78 range for much of late 2025, this denial from Iran ends hopes for a quick resolution. The immediate rebound to over $76 shows that the market’s downside is well-protected against this kind of news. For derivatives traders, this signals a clear rise in expected volatility. The CBOE Crude Oil Volatility Index (OVX) has already jumped 12% this week to 38.5, its highest level in four months. This suggests that strategies involving the purchase of options, such as straddles or strangles, will likely be profitable to capture sharp price movements in either direction. This development comes as recent OPEC+ production data for February 2026 shows compliance remains strong, keeping supply tight. We remember how similar tensions surrounding Hormuz in mid-2025 briefly sent Brent futures spiking over $90 a barrel before settling down. Traders will be looking to build long positions in front-month futures contracts, anticipating a similar, if smaller, test of higher price levels.

    Tracking Brent WTI And Broader Market Spillovers

    The spread between Brent and WTI crude should be a key focus. Middle East tensions typically impact the international Brent benchmark more directly than the US-centric WTI, causing the spread to widen. The spread has already moved to $5.80, up from an average of $4.25 in the fourth quarter of 2025, and traders should anticipate this gap growing further. This will also have knock-on effects for inflation-related derivatives and equities. We have seen recent core PCE inflation figures for January 2026 come in at a stubborn 2.9%, and sustained higher energy prices will complicate central bank decisions. Protective put buying on airline and transportation ETFs could be a wise hedge against rising fuel costs impacting their earnings. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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