Oil prices hit four-week high as US, Iran step up attacks in Strait of Hormuz

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Oil prices hit four-week high as US, Iran step up attacks in Strait of Hormuz


Oil prices rose on Tuesday to their highest in four weeks, as the US reimposed its naval blockade of Iran and as renewed attacks between Washington and Tehran heightened concerns over energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz.

Brent crude rose to its highest since June 12 and US West Texas Intermediate to its highest since June 16 — before the United States and Iran signed a memorandum of understanding to end the conflict on June 18.

Brent crude futures were up $2.89, or 3.47pc, at $86.19 per barrel at 4:58pm PKT, while WTI crude rose $1.53, or 1.96pc, to $79.67 a barrel.

“Despite signing the memorandum of understanding and having a deal, this did not last for even a few weeks. So that’s the concern the market is trying to price right now,” said ANZ analyst Soni Kumari.




“What we think is that the peak of the escalation is behind us, but there are upside risks to oil prices if these disruptions continue and that will keep prices in the $85-$90 range.”

The US military carried out a third consecutive night of strikes against Iran between Monday and Tuesday, as US President Donald Trump reinstated a blockade of Iranian shipping and proposed charging a 20pc fee to guard the Strait of Hormuz.

Amid the strikes, two United Arab Emirates tankers were hit by two Iranian cruise missiles in the southern lane of the Strait of Hormuz in Omani territorial waters, the UAE Ministry of Defence said on Monday. It added that one Indian crew member was killed and eight others were wounded in the strikes.

Shipping data on Monday also showed the number of tankers transiting the Strait of Hormuz fell in the past day to the lowest level in two months.

“The latest escalation, including the US reinstatement of the blockade and Iranian responses, has clearly injected fresh risk into the market,” KCM Trade chief market analyst Tim Waterer said.


“While a full closure hasn’t occurred, the competing objectives of both sides have made the supply picture highly uncertain,” he added.

Citi said in a note that the possibility of the Iranian regime walking away from the MoU until after the US mid-term elections has also risen, a scenario which would most likely see higher-for-longer oil prices.

However, Iran’s oil exports are continuing as usual despite the cancellation last week of a 60-day waiver of US oil sanctions, oil minister Mohsen Paknejad said on his official Telegram account.

Elsewhere, Yemen’s Houthi movement fired missiles at Saudi Arabia after the Yemeni government attacked an international airport in capital Sanaa on Monday.


The Yemeni government said it wanted to prevent an Iranian plane from landing in Sanaa after it failed to convince a Houthi delegation, which went to Tehran for assassinated Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei’s funeral, to board a Yemen flag carrier’s flight instead.

“If the Houthis extend their attacks to Saudi’s crude products in the Red Sea, it could put (further) uncertainties on crude flows from the region,” Simon Wong, a portfolio manager at Gabelli Funds, said in a note.

 
Depending on the course of events over the next few weeks, prices may go higher.

View for the last 6 months:

1784086952193.png

Peak pricing and impact to the downstream economy is obvious. Right in the middle of planting season across the northern hemisphere.
 

Oil prices hit four-week high as US, Iran step up attacks in Strait of Hormuz


Oil prices rose on Tuesday to their highest in four weeks, as the US reimposed its naval blockade of Iran and as renewed attacks between Washington and Tehran heightened concerns over energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz.

Brent crude rose to its highest since June 12 and US West Texas Intermediate to its highest since June 16 — before the United States and Iran signed a memorandum of understanding to end the conflict on June 18.

Brent crude futures were up $2.89, or 3.47pc, at $86.19 per barrel at 4:58pm PKT, while WTI crude rose $1.53, or 1.96pc, to $79.67 a barrel.

“Despite signing the memorandum of understanding and having a deal, this did not last for even a few weeks. So that’s the concern the market is trying to price right now,” said ANZ analyst Soni Kumari.




“What we think is that the peak of the escalation is behind us, but there are upside risks to oil prices if these disruptions continue and that will keep prices in the $85-$90 range.”

The US military carried out a third consecutive night of strikes against Iran between Monday and Tuesday, as US President Donald Trump reinstated a blockade of Iranian shipping and proposed charging a 20pc fee to guard the Strait of Hormuz.

Amid the strikes, two United Arab Emirates tankers were hit by two Iranian cruise missiles in the southern lane of the Strait of Hormuz in Omani territorial waters, the UAE Ministry of Defence said on Monday. It added that one Indian crew member was killed and eight others were wounded in the strikes.

Shipping data on Monday also showed the number of tankers transiting the Strait of Hormuz fell in the past day to the lowest level in two months.

“The latest escalation, including the US reinstatement of the blockade and Iranian responses, has clearly injected fresh risk into the market,” KCM Trade chief market analyst Tim Waterer said.


“While a full closure hasn’t occurred, the competing objectives of both sides have made the supply picture highly uncertain,” he added.

Citi said in a note that the possibility of the Iranian regime walking away from the MoU until after the US mid-term elections has also risen, a scenario which would most likely see higher-for-longer oil prices.

However, Iran’s oil exports are continuing as usual despite the cancellation last week of a 60-day waiver of US oil sanctions, oil minister Mohsen Paknejad said on his official Telegram account.

Elsewhere, Yemen’s Houthi movement fired missiles at Saudi Arabia after the Yemeni government attacked an international airport in capital Sanaa on Monday.


The Yemeni government said it wanted to prevent an Iranian plane from landing in Sanaa after it failed to convince a Houthi delegation, which went to Tehran for assassinated Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei’s funeral, to board a Yemen flag carrier’s flight instead.

“If the Houthis extend their attacks to Saudi’s crude products in the Red Sea, it could put (further) uncertainties on crude flows from the region,” Simon Wong, a portfolio manager at Gabelli Funds, said in a note.


Why do you keep opening new threads? This should be in the Iranian war thread. At 6,919 posts on this forum, you should really know better by now ...
 
Why do you keep opening new threads? This should be in the Iranian war thread. At 6,919 posts on this forum, you should really know better by now ...
Alright Sir, I will post strictly on the Iranian war thread from now onwards.
 
Alright Sir, I will post strictly on the Iranian war thread from now onwards.
Ideally, this should be in the US Economy thread.

However, based on what I experienced between yesterday and today, let's keep this going.

I took Mrs. AZ's DD to Costco yesterday for gas. Brent crude futures were just starting to go up. Gas at that time was $3.79.

This morning, a hair over 24 hours later, after taking her to the doctor, we stop at Costco.

Gas is now up $0.06 per gallon. That jump in Brent crude resulted in this in the course of 24 hours.

The markets are not optimistic of any kind of lasting agreement between the US and Iran.
 

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