Oil prices rise more than 1% amid concerns on Mideast tensions

By Arathy Somasekhar and Trixie Yap

(Reuters) -Oil prices climbed by more than 1% on Thursday, almost reversing previous session's losses, as Middle East tensions came back into focus ahead of the U.S. election despite a mixed bag of U.S. fuel inventories.

Brent crude futures rose 95 cents, or 1.27% to $75.91 at 0302 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures climbed $1, or 1.41%, to $71.77 as an exchange of heavy fire between Israel and Hezbollah continued to worry markets about supply.

Oil prices have gained nearly 4% so far this week, helping trim last week's losses of than 7% on worries about Chinese demand and easing concerns about potential disruptions caused by fighting in the Middle East.

"The bumpy play in oil prices is a mix of technical reaction to uncertainty ahead," said Priyanka Sachdeva, a senior market analyst at Phillip Nova.

"Amid lack for supporting catalyst and with sore sentiments all over oil markets, oil bulls jumping at any additional headline of escalating conflict in Middle East, looks well justified," she added.

Israel launched strikes on Syrian capital Damascus early on Thursday, Syrian state media said, the latest such attack amid the war in Gaza.

This followed earlier Israeli strikes on Beirut's southern suburbs on Wednesday and after Hezbollah said it fired precision guided missiles for the first time at Israeli targets.

The intensifying exchanges of fire come as Washington makes a final major push for peace between Israel and Iran-backed groups Hezbollah and Hamas before the Nov. 5 U.S. presidential election that could alter U.S. policy in the Middle East.

The current volatility ahead of a critical week of U.S. Election followed with Fed’s policy decision is ensuring enough traction to cause wilder fluctuations, even though supplies remain ample, said Phillip Nova's Sachdeva.

Meanwhile, U.S. crude inventories rose by 5.5 million barrels last week, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration on Wednesday, compared with analysts' expectations in a Reuters poll for a 270,000-barrel rise.



Despite the stockpile accumulation, implied demand still rose, said ANZ analysts in a client note. [EIA/S]

Also on the oil demand front, support came from stronger demand for distillates, according to JP Morgan analysts in a client note, highlighting strong travel demand in Asia and consistent drawdowns in distillate stocks in several major markets.

Source: Investing.com

Останні публікації
Oil prices slip slightly lower; caution ahead of Trump inauguration
22.01.2025 - 09:00
Gold prices steady ahead of Trump inauguration; volatility likely
22.01.2025 - 09:00
European natural gas prices dip ahead of Trump's inauguration
22.01.2025 - 09:00
Column-Global aluminium market faces a year of trade turbulence: Andy Home
22.01.2025 - 09:00
Trump directs US government to cut consumer costs, gives no details
22.01.2025 - 09:00
Oil dips as market awaits Trump's executive orders on energy
22.01.2025 - 09:00
FBI Acting Director Paul Abbate retires from the bureau, official says
22.01.2025 - 09:00
Analysis-Trump faces stiff challenges delivering on his promised 'Golden Age'
22.01.2025 - 09:00
Trump revokes Biden 50% EV target, freezes unspent charging funds
22.01.2025 - 09:00
Trump repeals Biden's efforts to block oil drilling on US coasts, Arctic
22.01.2025 - 09:00
Gold prices shine on safe-haven demand as traders try to gauge Trump's policies
22.01.2025 - 09:00
Texas ports, pilots suspend some operations as winter storm hits
22.01.2025 - 09:00
European gas prices volatile as Trump lifts moratorium on new export licenses
22.01.2025 - 09:00
Trump executive orders target climate, immigration policy, federal employees
22.01.2025 - 09:00
Factbox-European companies exposed as Trump takes aim at US offshore wind
22.01.2025 - 09:00

© Analytic DC. All Rights Reserved.

new
Аналіз ринку Як вплине завтра звіт NFP на курс долара США?