Skip to main content
Best News Website or Mobile Service
WAN-IFRA Digital Media Awards Worldwide 2022
Best News Website or Mobile Service
Digital Media Awards Worldwide 2022
Hamburger Menu

Advertisement

Advertisement

Business

Oil climbs on escalating tensions in Middle East

Oil climbs on escalating tensions in Middle East

A view shows oil tanks of Transneft oil pipeline operator at the crude oil terminal Kozmino on the shore of Nakhodka Bay near the port city of Nakhodka, Russia August 12, 2022. REUTERS/Tatiana Meel

New: You can now listen to articles.

This audio is generated by an AI tool.

SINGAPORE/NEW DELHI: Oil prices climbed on Monday (Jan 29) after a drone attack on US forces in Jordan added to worries over supply disruption in the Middle East as Houthi rebels stepped up their attacks on vessels in the Red Sea, hitting a Trafigura-operated fuel tanker.

Risks of a widening conflict in the Middle East come at the same time that Russian refined product exports are set to fall, with refineries and a major oil terminal under repair following drone attacks by Ukraine.

Brent crude futures rose 26 cents, or 0.3 per cent, to US$83.81 a barrel by 7.40am GMT (3.40pm, Singapore time) after hitting a session-high of US$84.80. US West Texas Intermediate crude futures gained 23 cents, or 0.3 per cent, to US$78.24 a barrel after reaching an intraday high of US$79.29 earlier in the session.

The attack on US troops in a drone strike in Jordan raised concerns of a wider conflict in the oil-rich Middle East.

"We believe the death of three US service members today in Jordan marks a critical inflection point in the ongoing conflict in the Middle East and raises a spectre of a more substantial US involvement in the war," RBC Capital analyst Helima Croft said in a note, adding that a more direct confrontation with Iran heightened the prospect of regional energy supply disruptions.

Commodities trader Trafigura said on Saturday it was assessing the security risks of further Red Sea voyages after firefighters put out a blaze on a tanker attacked by Yemen's Houthi group a day earlier.

"Disruptions to supply have been limited, but that changed on Friday after an oil tanker operating on behalf of Trafigura was hit by a missile off the coast of Yemen," ANZ analysts said in a note.

"With oil tankers linked to the US and UK now under threat of attack, the market is likely to reprice the risk of disruptions."

Both contracts rose for a second week in a row and settled at their highest in nearly two months on Friday, supported by Middle East and Russian supply concerns while positive US economic growth and signs of Chinese stimulus boosted demand expectations.

"The air of complacency lingering around the oil market has evaporated," IG markets analyst Tony Sycamore said.

"Dips in WTI are likely to find buyers back towards the 200-day moving average at US$77.60, before a stronger layer of support at US$75.00 from buyers looking for a push into the low US$80's."

Russia will likely cut exports of naphtha, a petrochemical feedstock, by some 127,500 to 136,000 barrels per day, or around a third of its total exports, after fires disrupted operations at refineries on the Baltic and Black Seas, according to traders and LSEG ship-tracking data.

On Feb 1, leading ministers from the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allies led by Russia, known as OPEC+, will meet online.

However, OPEC+ will likely decide its oil production levels for April and beyond in the coming weeks, OPEC+ sources said, as the meeting would take place too early for decisions to be made on further output policy.

Source: Reuters/at

Advertisement

Also worth reading

Advertisement