Oil rises 5% on renewed US-Iran tension

A pumpjack operates at the Vermilion Energy site in Trigueres, France, June 14, 2024. REUTERS
SINGAPORE, April 20 (Reuters) – Oil prices jumped more than 5% on Monday, on fears that the ceasefire between the ‌United States and Iran could collapse after the U.S. seized an Iranian cargo ship, while traffic through the Strait of Hormuz stayed largely halted.
Brent crude futures advanced $5.08, or 5.62%, to $95.46 a barrel by 0418 GMT and U.S. West Texas Intermediate was ​at $88.86 a barrel, up $5.01, or 5.97%.
Both contracts tumbled by 9% on Friday, their largest daily declines ​since April 18, after Iran said passage for all commercial vessels through the Strait ⁠of Hormuz was open for the remaining ceasefire period and U.S. President Donald Trump said Iran has ​agreed to never close the strait again.
“Within 24 hours of Friday’s ‘completely open’ announcement, there were already tankers ​that were fired upon by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), leading to more fears from the shippers on attempting to leave,” said June Goh, a senior oil market analyst at Sparta Commodities.
“Market fundamentals are getting worse, as 10-11 million barrels ​per day of crude oil remains shut in.”
The United States said on Sunday that it had seized ​an Iranian cargo ship that tried to run its blockade while Iran said it would retaliate amid growing worries of ‌a ⁠resumption of hostilities.
Tehran also said it would not participate in a second round of negotiations that the U.S. had hoped to kick off before its two-week ceasefire with Iran expires this week.
Advertisement · Scroll to continue

The United States has maintained a blockade of Iranian ports, while Iran has lifted and then re-imposed its own blockade of the Strait, which ​handled roughly one-fifth of ​the world’s oil supply ⁠before the war began almost two months ago.
“Oil markets continue to gyrate in response to oscillating social media posts by the U.S. and Iran, rather than ​the realities on the ground which remain challenging for oil flows to resume ​in a ⁠rapid fashion,” Saul Kavonic, MST Marquee’s head of research, said.
“The announcement of the Strait opening proved premature,” Kavonic said.
“Ship owners will be twice shy about heading towards the Strait again without receiving much more confidence that any ⁠announced ​passage is real.”
More than 20 ships passed the strait on ​Saturday carrying oil, liquefied petroleum gas, metals and fertilizers, Kpler data showed, the highest number of vessels crossing the waterway since March ​1.

Reporting by Florence Tan and Siyi Liu in Singapore; Editing by Lisa Shumaker, Lincoln Feast and Raju Gopalakrishnan

Share this post :

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest

Create a new perspective on life

Your Ads Here (365 x 270 area)
Latest News

China leaves lending benchmarks unchanged for 11th month in AprilA man walks past a People’s Bank of China (PBOC) sign in Beijing, China April 8, 2024. REUTERS/Florence Lo/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab SHANGHAI, April 20 (Reuters) – China on Monday left benchmark loan prime rates (LPRs) unchanged for the 11th consecutive month in ​April, in line with market expectations. WHY IT’S IMPORTANT Solid economic growth ‌at the start of the year and a pick-up in inflation reduced the need for fresh monetary easing to support the broader economy. The Week in Breakingviews newsletter offers insights and ideas from Reuters’ global financial commentary team. Sign up here. BY THE ​NUMBERS It kept the one-year LPR at 3.00% and five-year ​LPR at 3.50%. In a Reuters survey of 20 market participants ⁠conducted last week, all participants predicted no change to either ​of the two rates. Advertisement · Scroll to continue CONTEXT ** The Chinese economy’s 5.0% annual growth pace in ​the first quarter sits at the top of its full-year target range of 4.5%-5.0%, highlighting a resilience that sets it apart from much of Asia, ​helped by ample strategic oil reserves and a diversified energy ​mix. ** China’s factory-gate prices rose for the first time in more than three years ‌in ⁠March, in an early sign that the war in Iran is feeding cost pressures into the world’s second-largest economy. KEY QUOTES ** DBS “With no clear signs of a sharp slowdown and credit demand ​yet to recover ​meaningfully, policymakers are ⁠likely to stay with targeted easing rather than shift toward broad-based rate cuts.” Advertisement · Scroll to continue ** Societe Generale “Despite the ​strong first-quarter GDP, policymakers are likely to refrain ​from further ⁠easing at the late-April Politburo meeting, even amid the Middle East conflict. “Under a contained conflict scenario lasting only a few months, we ⁠do ​not expect additional fiscal stimulus this ​year and see scope for just one People’s Bank of China (PBOC) rate cut toward ​year-end.” U.S. stocks rallied on Friday, with the Dow jumping 1.8%, the S&P 500 climbing 1.2% and the Nasdaq rising 1.5%. 00:02 01:50 Reporting by Shanghai Newsroom; Editing by Christopher Cushing and Jacqueline Wong

Categories

Subscribe our newsletter

Purus ut praesent facilisi dictumst sollicitudin cubilia ridiculus.