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Oil hedging hit record high recently after new United States sanctions on Russia

Demand to lock in oil and gas rates jumped to a record high on Friday on the AEGIS hedging market, as the harshest U.S. sanctions yet on Russian energy trade sent oil rates to multimonth highs.

AEGIS, which states its customers' business represents about 25-30% of overall U.S. oil production, taped the greatest trading activity to date on its platforms on Jan. 10, as producers profited from higher volatility, said Jay Stevens, director of market analytics at AEGIS.

Hedging can assist manufacturers decrease threat and secure their production from sharp relocations in the marketplace by securing a cost. It can also provide traders opportunities to profit from volatility.

West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures settled at $76.57 per barrel on Jan. 10, marking a three-month high. International benchmark, Brent unrefined futures settled at $79.76. a barrel, after earlier in the session exceeding $80 a barrel. for the very first time since Oct. 7.

Oil costs started to climb after traders in Europe and Asia. distributed an unproven file detailing the sanctions.

Later Friday, the U.S. Treasury formally announced new. sanctions on the Russian energy sector, consisting of oil majors. Gazprom Neft and Surgutneftegaz to attempt to. curtail Moscow's capability to fund its war with Ukraine.

The sanctions likewise target over 180 tankers and lots of oil. traders, oilfield service providers, insurance companies and. energy officials.

(source: Reuters)