Middle East Conflict Sparks Surge in Oil Prices. Stock futures fall, gold and dollar climb as traders gauge fallout.
Oil prices surged Sunday after the U.S. and Israel traded deadly blows with Iran across the Middle East, leaving Wall Street bracing for the economic fallout of an extended regional war.
Benchmark U.S. crude futures rose as much as 11%, trading as high as $75 a barrel, before retreating slightly. Brent futures, the global price gauge, jumped 8%, to roughly $79 a barrel. Futures tied to the S&P 500 fell around 1%. Changes in stock futures don’t always reflect market moves after the opening bell.
Tit-for-tat strikes in recent days have thrust one of the world’s key chokepoints for energy into the crossfire. As tanker operators scrambled for safety, momentarily snarling supplies of oil, natural gas and more, traders have waded into the fog of war across live social-media feeds and TV coverage.
Iranian officials and media in recent days have shared conflicting statements about whether Tehran intends to stymie sea traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, a tactic that analysts say is likely designed to sow confusion. While there haven’t been concerted attacks on energy infrastructure so far, tanker-tracking firms say many companies have avoided traversing the narrow shipping route out of caution.
“The Iranians understand that the key sensitivity to the U.S. is the price of oil. They’re trying to increase the price,” said Gregory Brew, a senior analyst at the Eurasia Group.
“What they’re trying to do right now is create uncertainty about the safety of the waterway,” added Brew, an Iran specialist. “They want to maintain space up the escalatory ladder. They’re not going 100% immediately.”
Now, the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the deaths of U.S. servicemembers is pushing the conflict into a perilous new phase.
Investors and politicians view a forced closure of the strait by Tehran as a scorched-earth tactic that would draw a furious military response. Even so, analysts at Barclays believe a prolonged conflict could put $100-a-barrel oil in play.
That type of price jump would push up the cost of fuel for cars, power plants and more the world over, rippling through the economy and markets. In a sign that investors are searching for safety, gold futures on Sunday climbed more than 2%.
“For equities and credit the impact [of the war] is negative, but only a severe and sustained oil disruption would imply substantial consequences for global growth,” Goldman Sachs analysts wrote on Sunday. “We expect cyclical sectors and oil importers—some of which have had strong starts to the year and may face vulnerability from positioning adjustments—will likely see pressure unless a resolution occurs quickly.”
For weeks, as Washington massed forces in and around the Middle East, traders snapped up oil futures for fear of a conflict that could disrupt a roughly six-mile-wide shipping route through which roughly one-fifth of global oil and natural gas travel. Benchmark U.S. prices as of Friday had already jumped 20% from their early January lows.
That type of increase is normal when tensions flared with Tehran in recent years. But the tankers hauling oil and fuel through the Strait of Hormuz have never been disrupted at length.
Even last year, when Iranian officials reportedly threatened to choke off shipments through the waterway during a 12-day war between Iran and the U.S. and Israel, crude prices quickly retreated after the dust from the conflict had settled.
But the speed and severity of strikes by Israeli and American forces in recent days, as well as Iranian counterattacks on energy-export powerhouses lining the Persian Gulf, took some analysts by surprise. President Trump’s stated goal for regime change in the Islamic Republic has upped the ante.
ClearView Energy Partners opened a missive to clients this weekend with an ominous warning: This time could be different.
“[C]ivil strife in the wake of regime change also threatens to introduce chronic risk—inside Iran, and regionally—as factions jockey for power,” the analysts said. “In short, crude price premia could persist beyond the end of Israeli and U.S. combat operations.”
Oil prices’ recent climb suggests some wartime risks have already been priced in. Now, “the key question is when do vessels re-establish export flows,” said Alan Gelder, senior vice president of refining, chemicals and oil markets at energy consultant Wood Mackenzie.
Gelder added that a full resumption of shipments from countries including Iran, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Iraq could take weeks, even in an optimistic scenario in which Tehran agrees to cooperate with Washington’s demands over its nuclear program.
“During that time, oil prices are heavily risked to the upside,” Gelder said. Analysts say a sustained disruption of Qatari natural gas could similarly boost prices for the heating and power-generation fuel.
Should the worst-case scenarios play out, Americans could face higher prices at the pump heading toward midterm elections, pressuring Trump’s affordability push. But the energy-hungry economies of Asia and Europe could pay an even steeper cost.
In a note to clients Sunday, Evercore analysts said a weekslong oil-price run-up to roughly $80 or $85 a barrel “would leave only a small impact on the global economy and very little on the U.S.”
The impacts would snowball with a more sustained or severe move. “The risk case of $100-120 oil is in our mind qualitatively different,” Evercore wrote. “The price shock would be much more material, raising risks to inflation expectations.”
Global News on Umojja.com