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Mideast crude benchmarks reach a three-year high due to military conflict that disrupts supply

Mideast crude benchmarks reach a three-year high due to military conflict that disrupts supply
Mideast crude benchmarks reach a three-year high due to military conflict that disrupts supply

On 'Monday, spot premiums for Middle East crude benchmarks Dubai, Murban and Oman rose to three-year-highs as a military conflict disrupted shipping across the world's largest oil-exporting area. U.S. and Israel strikes on Saturday killed Iranian Supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei, causing retaliatory actions by Iran. This has increased the risks for commercial shipping in the last 24 hours.

Shipping data revealed that at least 150 vessels including oil tankers and LNG tanks had anchored in the Strait of Hormuz (and its surrounding waters) on Sunday.

On Monday, the disruptions caused a 9% increase in global oil prices.

Data from trade sources showed that Cash Dubai's premium reached $5.91 per barrel on Monday. This is the highest since September 2022. The spot premiums for Oman futures and Murban swaps to Dubai also rose to three-year highs, at $5.51 per barrel and $6.52.

Ships carrying diesel, jet-fuel, gasoline, and other products, as well as oil equivalent to one-fifth the global demand, from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates sail through the Strait.

Sources said that the prompt monthly price spread in Dubai, a Middle East benchmark, widened to $3.25 per barrel on Monday from 52 cents the previous day.

They also noted that the April-May spread jumped from 52 cents to $1.43 per barrel.

Backwardation is a market structure in which prices for immediate months are higher than future months' prices, indicating a shortage. Saudi Aramco shut down its 550,000 barrels-per-day Ras Tanura Refinery on Monday as a precautionary move following a drone strike.

(source: Reuters)