Oil & Gas

Oil prices hit 1-month high as renewed hostilities mount further pressure on Hormuz

Oil prices have surged to their highest level in a month as renewed hostilities between the United States and Iran entered a third day on Monday dimming hopes for a return to normality in the Strait of Hormuz, a critical route for international oil shipment. Brent crude, the primary international benchmark, rose as much as 3.8 percent on Tuesday, extending a 9.6 percent gain from the previous day.

Brent rent futures for September delivery stood at $85.92 a barrel as of 08:00 GMT, the highest since June 15. After easing to pre-conflict levels following Washington and Tehran’s signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) for peace last month, Brent has risen 19 percent from its price before the start of the US-Israel war on Iran in late February.

According to Al Jazeera, the US Central Command on Monday announced strikes on Iran for a third day to shrink Gulf country’s ability to attack “innocent civilians and commercial shipping” in the strategic waterway. In retaliation, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said it hit two oil supertankers in the strait and launched missile and drone strikes against US military assets in Kuwait and Bahrain.

Adding to the market volatility, President Donald Trump said on Monday the US would reimpose its blockade of Iranian ports and begin charging vessels transit fees as the “guardian” of the shipping route.

“Crude oil is fast losing its strategic petroleum reserve buffer, and a violent repricing up cannot be discounted until the market sees toned-down rhetoric from both parties,” June Goh, a senior oil market analyst at Sparta Commodities in Singapore, told Al Jazeera, referring to the US government’s emergency oil stockpile, which the Trump administration has drawn on to mitigate supply constraints.

After ticking up in recent weeks amid hopes for a permanent peace deal between Washington and Tehran, traffic in the Strait of Hormuz has plummeted amid the renewed threat of violence against commercial shipping.

A total of 57 transits were recorded from Friday through Sunday, a more than 50 percent drop compared with the previous week, according to ship-tracking platform MarineTraffic. Roughly 130 vessels transited the strait daily before the US and Israel launched their initial strikes on Iran in late February.

“Traffic through Hormuz is grinding to a halt, back to – or even below – our immediate pre-MoU pace,” Rory Johnston, founder of oil market research firm Commodity Context, said. “The oil market has proven extremely patient through this crisis, in large part thanks to an ample stock cushion upon which we were able to draw to blunt the sharpness of the supply shock.

“Unfortunately, much of that cushion has now been depleted, leaving us much more vulnerable to a rerun of March and April.”

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