Oil prices jump more than $4 as Middle East violence rattles markets | Inquirer Business

Oil prices jump more than $4 as Middle East violence rattles markets

/ 08:07 AM October 09, 2023

BEIJING  -Oil prices jumped more than $4 a barrel in early Asian trade on Monday, as dramatic military clashes between Israeli and Hamas forces over the weekend deepened political uncertainty across the Middle East.

Brent crude rose $4.18, or 4.94 percent, to $88.76 a barrel by 0120 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was at $87.02 a barrel, up $4.23, or 5.11 percent.

The surge in oil prices reversed last week’s downward trend – the largest weekly decline since March – in which Brent fell about 11 percent and WTI retreated more than 8 percent amid concerns about high interest rates and their impact on global demand.

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Palestinian Islamist group Hamas on Saturday launched the largest military assault on Israel in decades, killing hundreds of Israelis and triggering a wave of retaliatory Israeli air strikes on Gaza that continued through Sunday.

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The eruption of violence threatens to derail U.S. efforts to broker a rapprochement between Saudi Arabia and Israel, in which the kingdom would normalize ties with Israel in return for a defense deal between Washington and Riyadh.

A normalization of Saudi-Israeli relations would likely freeze recent moves toward detente between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

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“Increasing geopolitical risk in the Middle East should support oil prices… higher volatility can be expected” analysts from ANZ Bank said in a client note.

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The attacks drew condemnation from Western nations but were openly praised by Iran and by Hezbollah, Iran’s allies in Lebanon.

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Market attention has turned to the possibility of Iranian involvement in the attacks, which Israeli authorities have already alleged.

“For this conflict to have a lasting and meaningful impact on oil markets, there must be a sustained reduction in oil supply or transport,” Vivek Dhar, an analyst at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, said in a note.

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“If Western countries officially link Iranian intelligence to the Hamas attack, then Iran’s oil supply and exports face imminent downside risks,” Dhar said.

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TAGS: Asian Trade, Middle East, oil prices, uncertainty

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