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The fourth day of rising oil prices as a result of US strikes against Iran has raised fears about wider conflict

The price of oil rose on?Thursday for a forth consecutive day after a wave of U.S. strikes?on Iranian installations fueled fears of a full-scale conflict and supply?disruptions? in the Strait of Hormuz.

After reimposing its naval blockade, the United States hit?Iran?s?coastal defenses and missile sites, on Wednesday. Iran, meanwhile, threatened to cut off regional energy exports by saying that it was in a "existential conflict" with America.

Brent crude futures were up 33 cents or 0.4% to $85.28 a barge by 0026 GMT. U.S. West Texas intermediate futures were up 42 cents or 0.5% to $80.02 a barrel.

Both benchmarks rose about 0.3% Wednesday, and hovered near the one-month highs?touched Tuesday.

Hiroyuki Kikukawa is the chief strategist at Nissan Securities Investment.

He said that "while mediation efforts are continuing by neighbouring nations and the consensus is that a full-scale conflict is unlikely," WTI could rise to between $85-$87, depending on the outcome of the conflict.

The oil prices rose this week, as the Strait of Hormuz was a major supply hub for oil and natural gas before the war.

Last week, hostilities between Iran and the U.S. re-emerged, threatening to undermine a fragile truce that had been reached in June following several months of fighting.

Analysts claim that Iran may have signalled its intention to use Houthi allies to close the Bab el-Mandeb Red Sea gateway through?Yemen, opening a front against Washington. This would put two of 'the most vital energy arteries in the world at risk.

Goldman Sachs stated that Brent could reach $110 if the Gulf exports continue to stagnate, but could drop into the $60s at year's end if tensions ease and production recovers more quickly than expected.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration reported that crude inventories dropped by 1.7m barrels during the week ending July 10 compared to analysts' expectations of a 2.6m-barrel draw. (Reporting and editing by Shri Navaratnam.)

(source: Reuters)