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Crude Oil Prices Jump on Fears of a Wider Conflict in the Middle East
Business & Economy

Crude Oil Prices Jump on Fears of a Wider Conflict in the Middle East


May WTI crude oil (CLK26) today is up +3.37 (+3.82%), and May RBOB gasoline (RBK26) is up +0.1158 (+3.92%).  Crude oil and gasoline prices are sharply higher today, recovering some of Monday’s losses amid concerns that the conflict in the Middle East could escalate.

Crude prices are climbing today after the Wall Street Journal reported that Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have taken steps toward joining the Iran war, potentially signaling an escalation of the fighting.  Saudi Arabia agreed to give the US military access to King Fahd Air Base, and the UAE closed an Iranian-owned hospital and club.  Iran’s Middle Eastern neighbors are growing frustrated with Iran, which has responded to US and Israeli attacks by hitting targets in several nearby nations.

Energy prices remain underpinned after Qatar said last Thursday that there was “extensive damage” at the world’s largest natural gas export plant at Ras Laffan Industrial City.  Qatar said that Iran’s strikes damaged 17% of Ras Laffan’s LNG export capacity, a damage that will take three to five years to repair.   The International Energy Agency said Monday that more than 40 energy sites across nine countries in the Middle East have been “severely or very severely” damaged, potentially prolonging disruptions to global supply chains once the war in Iran ends.

The Strait of Hormuz remains essentially closed, and Persian Gulf oil producers have been forced to cut production by roughly 6% as local storage facilities reach capacity.  The Strait of Hormuz normally handles a fifth of the world’s oil.  Goldman Sachs warns that crude prices could exceed the 2008 record high of close to $150 a barrel if flows through the Strait of Hormuz remain depressed through March.

In a bearish factor for crude, OPEC+ on March 1 said it will boost its crude output by 206,000 bpd in April, above estimates of 137,000 bpd, although that production hike now seems unlikely given that Middle East producers are being forced to cut production due to the Middle East war.  OPEC+ is trying to restore all of the 2.2 million bpd production cut it made in early 2024, but still has nearly another 1.0 million bpd left to restore.  OPEC’s February crude production rose by +640,000 bpd to a 3.25-year high of 29.52 million bpd.



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