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Oil prices jump on renewed US-Iran hostilities

The price of oil rose by more than 1% after renewed fighting between the U.S.A. and Iran. This triggered a fragile ceasefire, and dashed hopes that the Strait of Hormuz would be reopened, an important transit route for oil and gas. Brent crude futures rose $1.41 or 1.41% to $101.47 per barrel at 0123 GMT. West Texas Intermediate (WTI), U.S. crude oil futures, rose $1.12 or 1.18% to $95.93 per barrel. Prices had already risen more than 3% at the opening of the market. This ended three days of declines following reports that earlier in the week,?the U.S. was close to reaching a deal with Iran to end the fighting. It would also allow the Strait of Hormuz reopen fully. However, it would put off the larger issues surrounding Iran's nuke programme. Both contracts are expected to drop 6% in the next week. The price spike on Friday was a result of Iran accusing the U.S. of violating the month-long ceasefire between the two countries. Meanwhile, the U.S. claimed its attacks were in retaliation for Iranian?fire that hit its navy ships transiting the strait on Thursday.

Iran's military claimed that the U.S. targeted an Iranian oil-tanker, another ship, and civilian areas on the mainland and in the Strait. Donald Trump, the U.S. president, told reporters that the ceasefire remained in place despite the renewed fighting. Washington was waiting for a response from?Iran to its latest peace proposal. This did not address several contentious issues, including the U.S. request to reopen a strait that was a conduit for one-fifth the world's supply of oil and gas before the war, but has been mostly closed since the conflict began, which included strikes by Israel. Tony Sycamore, IG analyst, said that the situation on the supply front remains tight. He also stated that a 'peace agreement' remains elusive. Separately the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which is investigating trades of oil prices totaling $7 billion, ahead of President Trump's key Iran War-related announcements, was reported on Thursday. The majority of trades were'short positions', or bets that prices would fall, made on the Intercontinental Exchange and Chicago Mercantile Exchange before Trump announced his intention to delay attacks on Iran or to announce a ceasefire.

(source: Reuters)