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Oil prices rise as the Iran conflict escalates and disrupts shipping

Oil prices rise as the Iran conflict escalates and disrupts shipping
Oil prices rise as the Iran conflict escalates and disrupts shipping

On Monday, oil prices rose 7% and reached their highest level in months as Iran and Israel intensified attacks?in the Middle East. They damaged tankers?and disrupted shipments?from the key producing area.

Brent crude futures soared to $82.37 in the first trading session after U.S., Israel and other countries launched attacks on Iran, killing its Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, on Saturday. Brent futures at 0054 GMT were $78.24 per barrel, an increase of $5.37 or 7.37%.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude rose by $4.66 or 6.95% to $71.68 per barrel, after reaching $75.33 earlier. This was the highest since June 2025.

Israel launched another wave of strikes on Tehran Sunday, and Iran responded by firing more missiles. This came a day following the death of the Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei which threw the Middle East into a state of uncertainty.

Shipping sources and officials reported on Sunday that the attacks caused collateral damage to ships as missiles struck at least three oil tankers near the Gulf coast and killed a seafarer.

Iran announced that it had closed the Strait of Hormuz to navigation, prompting Asian government and refiners --?key purchasers -- to assess their oil stocks.

Daniel Hynes, an ANZ analyst, said that the oil?supplies are at risk now because of the retaliatory actions against oil tankers in Strait -of-Hormuz.

Citi analysts predict Brent will trade between $80 to $90 per barrel this week due to the ongoing conflict.

The analysts led by Max Layton wrote in a report that "our baseline view is that either the Iranian leadership will change, or that the Iranian regime will change sufficiently to end the war in 1-2 weeks. Or the U.S. may decide to de-escalate after seeing a leadership shift and reduce Iran's nuclear and missile program within the same timeframe."

OPEC+ decided on Sunday to increase oil production by 206,000 barrels a day in April, despite the conflict.

RBC Capital analyst Helima Croft stated that every OPEC+ producer was essentially at full capacity, except for Saudi Arabia.

She said that the use of spare barrels would be "severely restricted" if waterways were rendered inoperable.

Shipping data revealed that the risks to commercial shipping increased in the last 24 hours. More than 200 vessels, including oil and gas tankers, dropped anchor in and around?the Strait of Gibraltar and its surrounding waters.

Fatih Birol, the director of the International Energy Agency (IEA), said that the agency is closely monitoring the Middle East. It is also in contact with the IEA and major producers from the region. Fatih Birol, director of the International Energy Agency (IEA), said on Sunday that it coordinates the release of strategic petroleum reserve (SPR) by developed countries during emergencies.

Goldman Sachs analysts, led by Daan Stuyven, said that global total visible oil inventory levels are at 7,827 million barrels. This is near the historical median expressed as 74 days' worth of global demand.

The oil market may be able to draw inventory, use spare capacity, and benefit from SPR global releases, they said.

(source: Reuters)