Call & Times

Crude prices jump after strikes halve Saudi output; US likely to tap strategic reserves

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Oil prices jumped on global markets Sunday night after a wave of weekend drone attacks instantly erased half of Saudi Arabia’s oil production.

Brent crude on Sunday traded at $70.98 per barrel on oil futures markets, an 18 percent surge from Friday’s close of $60.15, before falling back to about a 12 percent increase. U.S. benchmark West Texas intermedia­te crude opened at $61.27 per barrel, a 12 percent climb, before easing to a 10 percent gain.

In a tweet, Trump said he authorized the release of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve in a to-be-determined amount. He added that he told government agencies “to expedite approvals of the oil pipelines currently in the permitting process in Texas and various other States.”

The attack on Saudi Arabia’s oil infrastruc­ture immediatel­y knocked out 5.7 million barrels – nearly 6 percent – from the 100 million barrels per day that the world consumes.

“A supply disruption on this scale is an extraordin­ary event,” said Pavel Molchanov, an oil analyst with Raymond James. “No single disruption on this scale has occurred in decades.”

U.S. oil prices have been trading between $50 and $60 a barrel in the past six months. Brent crude, the global benchmark, has been trading slightly above that range. Most oil companies and nations favor world oil prices in the $70 to $80 range, which allows a healthy profit without rattling the economy or sparking a rush for alternativ­es to petroleum.

Oil prices could spike in the next several days as a result of the attack on Saudi’s state-run oil company, Saudi Aramco, which is the second-largest oil producer in the world, at 9.85 million barrels per day in August.

A jump in oil prices will likely weigh on an already-declining global economy, one beset by the U.S.-China trade war, White House sanctions against Iran and a decade-long economic expansion that shows signs of petering out.

On Sunday, Saudi officials said only a third of the affected 5.7 million barrels would be restored by Monday, leaving millions of barrels a day offline indefinite­ly.

With oil giants Venezuela and Iran mostly absently from world markets, an extended Saudi supply disruption could force industrial economies to tap emergency reserves, like the U.S. will do. There are 1.5 billion barrels available in strategic reserves among industrial economies.

The U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve holds 645 million barrels, equal to about one month of U.S. oil consumptio­n.

“The good news is that there is more than enough oil in inventory to prevent fuel shortages,” Molchanov said. “There are not going to be gasoline lines like there were in the 1970s.”

Though Yemen’s Houthi rebels claimed responsibi­lity for the weekend blasts, the U.S. blames Iran for the “unpreceden­ted attack on the world’s energy supply.” Tehran has denied responsibi­lity.

The last time the world lost a comparable slice of its oil supply was during the 1991 Persian Gulf War. As a result, there was a substantia­l increase in global oil prices, but the process was gradual because the war had been expected.

Oil prices result from a careful balance of supply and demand. Supplies have been mostly in balance this year, as U.S. production has made up for declines in Venezuela and Iran.

Even through the U.S. produces more oil than ever before – close to 12 million barrels a day – a disruption halfway around the world can send prices soaring on global markets.

“The Saudis are scrambling to make repairs and keep the oil flowing by taking it from storage,” said analyst John Kilduff of Again Capital. “The response to the attack will determine how high prices go and for how long.”

But Americans are more insulated from dramatic swings because technologi­cal advances have increased domestic oil output and heightened efficiency, from automobile mileage to home heating. U.S. shale oil production has reduced domestic demand for Persian Gulf oil from 3 million barrels a day in 2003 to 1 million barrels now.

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