On the day the news fermented, the market focus was not on what breakthroughs had been made in the peace negotiations, but rather on who had not truly sat at the table. Pakistan is waiting for Iran to confirm whether it will participate in the second round of peace talks planned to be held in Islamabad; the Pakistani side has made it clear that Iran's decision before the two-week ceasefire period ends is a "strongly critical" juncture. Meanwhile, sources say that the specific departure time of U.S. Vice President Vance to Pakistan is "still unclear", which leaves the timeline for external mediation equally uncertain. The dual waiting quickly rippled through the energy market, with supply risk expectations heating up again, WTI increasing nearly 4% during the day, and Brent crude oil rising more than 3.6%.
Islamabad is waiting: Iran's nod is the key
What is on the table right now is not what the second round of peace talks will discuss, but whether the negotiations can even begin. Pakistan has pushed the relevant agenda to the forefront, and the signals released are clear: the host is willing to promote, willing to organize, and even willing to leave space for subsequent communication, but whether the conference can truly commence first depends on whether Iran provides a formal response.
This is also why the Pakistani side defines Iran's decision to attend before the end of the ceasefire period as "strongly critical". The weight of this statement lies not in the words themselves, but in what it reveals about the true focus of the current process—the market and various parties cannot temporarily make judgments around the negotiation text, details of the topics, or expected outcomes, because the most fundamental step, which is whether the key party will participate, remains unsettled.
In other words, the current narrative focuses not on the terms of an agreement, but on the issue of seating. As long as Iran has not formally nodded, there are no real carriers for subsequent topics, and the so-called progress in peace talks can only stay at the preparatory level. For this reason, waiting itself has become the core of the event, and it has become the starting point for the market to reprice risks.
Two-week ceasefire is ending: the window is narrowing
All diplomatic actions are now compressed into a clear yet opaque time frame—the two-week ceasefire period. The clarity lies in the fact that all parties agree this is the key window for advancing peace talks and testing willingness; the opacity lies in the fact that outsiders do not know the exact start and end dates of this window, nor do they know when the second round of talks is originally scheduled to take place.
This structure of information naturally amplifies tension. Because when the ceasefire is still ongoing, the market can interpret the waiting as a game; but once the window gradually approaches its end and Iran has not yet made a formal statement, the originally "preparatory" state will quickly slide into "countdown." In the absence of any new certain signals, the passage of time itself will become a mechanism for amplifying risk.
More critically, the lack of verifiable calendar anchor points means that outsiders cannot bet around a specific date, nor can they set boundaries for risks using traditional event trading methods. Thus, the market can only respond in advance to the state of "approaching critical junctures but still without answers," making it easier for crude oil's risk premium to be quickly elevated.
Vance's itinerary undecided: the U.S. is slow to act
If Iran's attendance determines whether the negotiation table is filled, then when the U.S. intervenes determines whether external mediation can enter the operational phase. The information provided by sources is not complicated but is sensitive enough: Vance's specific departure time for Pakistan is "still unclear". This means that the rhythm of U.S. engagement has not been definitively finalized, and at least from the public level, it remains at the policy discussion or coordination stage.
The U.S. role in this game is not just that of an observer. Whether as a potential coordinator or as an important external variable affecting expectations, its actions will directly alter parties' judgments about the negotiations' quality, the continuity of the ceasefire, and the controllability of the regional situation. It is also for this reason that an undecided itinerary is not simply a matter of diplomatic arrangement, but an important clue for the market to understand the strength of U.S. will.
Thus, the situation presents a dual suspense: on one side, waiting for Iran's participation, and on the other, waiting for when the U.S. will actually play its cards. The former is related to whether the peace talks can be established, while the latter is related to whether external pressure and coordination can form substantial momentum. When both of these variables remain uncertain, the watchful stance will transform into pricing pressure.
The news emerges and oil prices surge: U.S. oil briefly spikes
The energy market's reaction to this uncertainty is much more direct than the diplomatic expressions. During the rumor phase, WTI crude oil increased nearly 4%, and Brent crude oil rose more than 3.6%. This indicates that what traders initially seized upon was not the hope for improvement in negotiations, but the possibility that supply chain risks might be re-exposed before any negotiations were finalized.
The driving logic behind this round of increases is also quite clear. It is not based on optimistic expectations of "breakthroughs in negotiations"; on the contrary, what drives prices upward is the lack of clarity in the situation: there is no answer to whether the second round of talks will take place, there is no definite calendar for when the ceasefire window will close, and there is no timetable for when the U.S. will intervene. In this context, the market is most inclined to trade first on the disturbance costs in the worst-case scenario.
When multiple key issues lack confirmation, crude oil no longer merely reflects the fundamentals of supply and demand, but also begins to reflect the geopolitical uncertainty discount. To be precise, this is not the market betting on the outcome, but pre-paying a premium for the "outcome that is delayed in appearing."
The negotiations haven't started: risk premium rises first
The next two crucial steps remain unchanged: first, will Iran formally respond and confirm whether it will participate in the second round of peace talks in Islamabad; second, will the U.S. clarify the timing of its intervention, allowing external mediation to move from rumors and discussions into an executable stage. As long as these two questions remain unanswered, the regional situation is difficult to define as truly controllable.
For the market, the most challenging aspect has never been the bad news itself, but the waiting without a timetable. Because once it becomes uncertain whether the negotiations can commence, whether the ceasefire window will be smoothly continued, and when key external powers will step in, trading will prioritize reflecting defensive pricing, and the tension in the crude oil market will be hard to dissipate quickly.
Ultimately, this round of oil price increases revolves not around upgrades that have already occurred, but around risks that have not yet been eliminated. The seats at the table are not yet filled, and the market is already pricing in uncertainty.
Join our community to discuss and grow stronger together!
Official Telegram community: https://t.me/aicoincn
AiCoin English Twitter: https://x.com/AiCoinzh
OKX Welfare Group: https://aicoin.com/link/chat?cid=l61eM4owQ
Binance Welfare Group: https://aicoin.com/link/chat?cid=ynr7d1P6Z
免责声明:本文章仅代表作者个人观点,不代表本平台的立场和观点。本文章仅供信息分享,不构成对任何人的任何投资建议。用户与作者之间的任何争议,与本平台无关。如网页中刊载的文章或图片涉及侵权,请提供相关的权利证明和身份证明发送邮件到support@aicoin.com,本平台相关工作人员将会进行核查。




