Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Oil prices surge as conflict intensifies in Israel

Workers at Majnoon oil field in Iraq. Analysts do not expect the conflict to have a big effect on oil supply Reuters/Essam Al-Sudani
Workers at Majnoon oil field in Iraq.
  • 3% increase after surprise attack on Saturday
  • Questions over potential role of Iran
  • Saudi normalisation talks set to be affected

Oil prices rose by more than 3 percent on Monday in the wake of Hamas’s surprise attack on Israel, which threatens to destabilise the Middle East.

Brent crude was trading at $87.65 a barrel, up 3.6 percent, by 17:41 GST while US West Texas Intermediate was at $86.15 a barrel, up just over 4 percent.

“The market has done a knee-jerk response to increased levels of conflict in the region and that’s normal,” Bill Farren-Price, senior researcher at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, told AGBI.

The surge in oil prices reversed last week’s downward trend, but analysts said they did not expect it to have a immediate major effect on the oil market as neither Israel nor its direct neighbours are critical to global oil supply.

Traders have expressed concern that Iran and possibly the US could become embroiled as the conflict escalates.

Iran provides funding and weapons to Hamas, but Tehran has denied that it was involved in Saturday’s assault. If Israel and its allies become convinced Iran did play a role, this could lead to a widening of the conflict and to a tightening of sanctions.

“If the Iran link becomes more proven in the mind of Western policy-makers, that’s an issue,” said Farren-Price. “This will change the game completely.”

Any retaliation on Tehran could compromise the passage of vessels through the Strait of Hormuz, which is a vital oil export route, and put the spotlight on Iranian supplies.

Iran has recently increased its oil exports in defiance of sanctions, as Washington has softened its approach. 

“But the US could choose to stop [doing that] and that would mean that we could see Iran production and exports go down,” said Farren-Price.

A protracted conflict between Israel and Hamas could also damage efforts to extend the Abraham Accords, normalising Israel’s relations with other Gulf Arab states – notably Saudi Arabia.

Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi told CNN in September that the US-sponsored talks would “see no success”.

On Monday, US banking giant Goldman Sachs said the weekend’s attacks would reduce the likelihood of Israeli-Saudi normalisation and the associated boost to Saudi production, Reuters reported.

Just three days earlier, Saudi officials had reportedly told the White House that they were willing to raise output next year as part of the proposed Israel deal.

On supply and demand, Farren-Price said: “It’s difficult to see oil prices continuing to rise given the weak global macroeconomic environment, unless there is a shortage of supply, and we’re not seeing that at the moment.”

Opec raised its world oil demand forecasts for the medium and long term in an annual outlook released on Monday. It expects demand to reach 116 million barrels a day by 2045, around 6 million bpd higher than predicted in last year’s report.

Latest articles

Mark Foster, who played professional rugby for Gloucester and now heads LIV Golf, says the sport is ripe for investment

LIV Golf chief says rugby next in line for Gulf funds

Talks are taking place with sovereign wealth funds and private equity entities about potential Gulf investment in rugby, according to Mark Foster, senior vice president of finance operations at Saudi-backed LIV Golf Investments. Foster, a former Gloucester and Exeter Chiefs professional rugby player, told The Good the Bad & the Rugby podcast that discussions have […]

Dubai mall Lamcy Plaza

Fire-hit Dubai shopping mall fails to attract auction bids

A Dubai shopping mall closed since a fire in 2017 has failed to attract interest from potential buyers after being put up for auction. The Lamcy Plaza mall went on auction earlier this month with a starting bid of AED200 million ($54 million), but received no offers. The five-storey neighbourhood mall, which opened in 1997, […]

Aircraft, Flight, Transportation

Emirates to resume Nigeria service from October

Emirates will restart services to Nigeria from October 1, after suspending flights on the route for almost two years. The Dubai airline will operate a daily service to  Lagos, Nigeria’s largest city.  “We are excited to resume our services to Nigeria,” said Adnan Kazim, deputy president and chief commercial officer, Emirates.  “We thank the Nigerian government for their partnership and support in re-establishing this […]

Agility has developed more than 1 million sq m of land, warehousing and logistics infrastructure in Saudi Arabia

Earnings at Kuwait’s Agility rise 22% to $61m in 2024

Kuwait-based logistics specialist Agility said first-quarter 2024 earnings rose 22 percent year on year to KD18.7 million ($61 million) Revenue increased nearly 5 percent year on year to KD336 million, the company said in a statement published on Boursa Kuwait. The company reported an operating cash flow of KD26 million for the first quarter. Assets stood at […]