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WTI rises as Biden comments on Middle East risks | Real Time Headlines

Oil prices could rise above $200 if Iran's energy infrastructure is destroyed, analysts say

U.S. crude oil oil price It rose about 5% on Thursday, its third straight session of gains, on concerns that Israel could attack Iran’s oil industry in retaliation for Tehran’s ballistic missiles missile attack This week.

President Joe Biden Asked by reporters Thursday morning if the United States would support an attack on Israel iranian oil facilities. “We’re talking about it. Regardless, I think it’s going to be a little bit,” Biden said. “Nothing’s going to happen today,” the president added.

CNBC has reached out to the White House for comment.

Daniel Galli, senior commodities strategist at TD Securities, said Biden’s comments were a catalyst for higher prices. “Geopolitical risks in the Middle East are probably at their highest level since the Gulf War,” Ghali told CNBC.

this US benchmark It surged 5.5% earlier in the session, hitting a session high of $73.99 a barrel. West Texas Intermediate crude is up about 8% this week, on track for its best weekly gain since March 2023.

Here are Thursday’s closing energy prices:

  • West Texas Intermediate Oil November contract: US$73.71 per barrel, up US$3.61, or 5.15%. U.S. crude oil prices have risen nearly 3% so far this year.
  • Brent December contract: US$77.62 per barrel, up US$3.72, or 5.03%. So far this year, the global benchmark is ahead by nearly 1%.
  • RBOB gasoline November contract: $2.0926/gallon, up 5.37%. Gasoline prices are down less than 1% so far this year.
  • natural gas November contract: $2.97/thousand cubic feet, up 2.91%. Natural gas prices are up about 18% so far this year.

Claudio Galimberti, chief economist at Rystad Energy, said that as the war in the Middle East intensifies, the risk of oil supply disruptions increases, but OPEC+ has a large amount of spare crude oil that may make up for this gap.

“This spare capacity currently prevents prices from spiraling out of control during one of the most severe and widespread crises in the Middle East over the past four decades,” Galimberti told clients in a note on Thursday.

Bjarne Schieldrop, chief commodities analyst at Swedish bank SEB, said that if Israel attacks the Islamic Republic’s oil infrastructure in retaliation for Tehran’s ballistic missile attack, OPEC+’s spare production capacity will be enough to make up for the disruption to Iran’s exports.

However, the problem is that the world’s remaining oil production capacity is mainly concentrated in the Middle East, especially the Gulf countries, which may also be at risk if a wider war breaks out, said TD Securities’ Galli.

If Israel attacks Iran’s oil industry, traders will start to worry about supply disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, Schilddrop said. “This will significantly increase the risk premium for oil,” he told CNBC. “European road sign.” The strait is one of the world’s most important arteries for oil trade.

As a result, oil prices could surge to $200 a barrel if Israel attacks Iran’s oil infrastructure, Schieldrop said.

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