Oil prices jump as Middle East turmoil roils markets
RoydadNaft – Oil prices surged more than 3% on Monday as military clashes between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas ignited fears of a wider conflict in the Middle East.
Brent crude was up $2.70, or 3.2%, to $87.28 a barrel by 1143 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was at $85.57 a barrel, up $2.78 or 3.4%.
Both benchmarks spiked by more than $4 a barrel earlier in the session.
The surge in oil prices reversed last week’s downtrend – the largest weekly decline since March – in which Brent fell about 11% and WTI retreated more than 8% as a darkening macroeconomic outlook intensified concerns about global demand.
Hamas on Saturday launched the largest military assault on Israel in decades, triggering a wave of retaliatory Israeli air strikes on Gaza.
The eruption of violence threatens to derail U.S. efforts to broker a rapprochement between Saudi Arabia and Israel, in which the kingdom would normalise ties with Israel in return for a defence deal between Washington and Riyadh.
The question is how long this oil rally will last, Citi analysts said.
“Timing is everything and the attacks almost certainly postpone any Saudi-Israeli rapprochement, along with any high probability expectation of Saudi Arabia reducing or eliminating its extra 1 million bpd cut if prices resume their recent fall.”
“If the conflict envelopes Iran… up to 3% of global oil supply is at risk. And if a wider conflict eventuates that ends up impacting transit through the Strait of Hormuz, around 20% of global oil supply could be held hostage,” energy analyst Saul Kavonic told Reuters.
Separately on Monday, OPEC raised its world oil demand forecasts for the medium and long term, in contrast with other forecasters, including the International Energy Agency (IEA) which has said demand could peak this decade.
