Medicine Hat News

Canadian oil stocks rise as U.S. air strike stokes fears of market disruption

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CALGARY

Higher oil prices in the wake of a U.S. air strike in Iraq that killed a top Iranian general drove up share prices for Canadian energy companies Friday and threatened higher fuel prices ahead for consumers.

The Toronto Stock Exchange energy index was up by as much as three% in early trading and closed the day ahead by 0.8%.

Meanwhile, the March contract for London-traded Brent crude peaked at US$69.48 per barrel in intraday trading before settling at US$68.59, up US$2.34 or 3.5%.

Several Calgary-based oil firms posted gains on Friday, including MEG Energy Corp., up 4.2%, Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. (0.8%), ARC Resources Ltd. (2.9%), Vermilion Energy Inc. (1.5%) and Tourmaline Oil Corp. (1.9%).

The U.S. attack and Iranian threats of reprisals serve as a reminder that there is a geopolitic­al risk to oil from the Middle East, financial analysts said.

The events aren’t likely to immediatel­y boost gasoline pump prices for Canadian consumers, but that could happen if tensions remain heightened for an extended period.

“You can’t sit on the sidelines and think that the risk is not really there,” said Phil Skolnick, an analyst with Eight Capital.

“It really is there and now we’ve seen that and that’s why the equities across the board in the energy space are reacting positively ... Now the question is: What’s Iran’s next move?”

Any disruption in heavy oil shipments from the Middle East to the U.S. Gulf Coast could increase demand for Canadian heavy oil and support prices, Skolnick said.

Exports from Canada have been constraine­d by a lack of pipeline space but increased demand could be met by growing crude-by-rail capacity, he said, adding recent wider-than-usual Canada-U.S. oil price difference­s make that option attractive in terms of profitabil­ity for producers.

A drone attack on Saudi Arabian oil facilities in September had a similar short-term affect on the Canadian energy sector and oil prices, but a faster-than-expected recovery meant impacts on consumers and energy companies were minimal.

“We saw US$80 (for Brent crude oil) last time with a relatively brief outage,” said Randy Ollenberge­r, managing director of oil and gas equity research at BMO Capital Markets.

“If Iran made a more concerted action to disrupt global production, you’d be looking at prices higher than that, in which case you’d certainly see an even bigger move in Canadian equities.”

Short-term effects in Canada will likely be muted, said CEO Allan Fogwill of the Canadian Energy Research Institute, noting that other OPEC countries and Russia have surplus capacity they can bring on if there are disruption­s.

“If the fundamenta­ls change and there’s some kind of escalation of the conflict, that’s a different story,” he added.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? Higher oil prices in the wake of a U.S. air strike in Iraq that killed a top Iranian general are driving up share prices for Canadian energy companies and threatenin­g higher fuel prices for consumers in Canada.
CP FILE PHOTO Higher oil prices in the wake of a U.S. air strike in Iraq that killed a top Iranian general are driving up share prices for Canadian energy companies and threatenin­g higher fuel prices for consumers in Canada.

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