Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Oil prices surge on reported tanker attacks

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(London) AFP: World oil prices surged yesterday on reports that two tankers had been attacked in the Gulf of Oman, worsening frayed tensions in the crude-rich Middle East region, analysts said.

The surge in oil prices boosted share prices of energy companies, while global stock markets won support also from the prospect of US interest rate cuts this year. Rising hopes of a rate cut helped to offset lingering tensions over the long-running trade war between Washington and Beijing.

Yesterday’s reported tanker attacks, the second incident involving shipping in the strategic sea lane in a matter of weeks, sent London’s Brent North Sea oil rebounding more than four percent in morning deals before trimming gains.

The Gulf of Oman lies at the other end of the strategic Strait of Hormuz from the Gulf, part of a vital shipping lane through which at least 15 million barrels of crude oil and hundreds of millions of dollars of non-oil imports pass.

According to Iranian state media, one of the tankers - the Norwegian-owned Front Altair -- was carrying ethanol from Qatar to Taiwan, while the Kokuka Courageous was carrying methanol from Saudi Arabia to Singapore.

“Tension across the Middle East is high - and the attacks on two tankers has further exacerbate­d the situation, even though there does not appear to have been any damage to the cargos,” said John Hall, chairman of British-based consultanc­y Alfa Energy.

“As a consequenc­e the market has responded dramatical­ly with an increase in the oil price of (as much as) four percent,” he told AFP.

“How long it will hold for is another matter and it has already fallen back slightly.”

Around midday in London, Brent for August delivery pulled back to stand at US$62 per barrel, up US$2.03, or more than three percent, from Wednesday.

New York’s West Texas Intermedia­te was US$1.52 or around three percent higher at US$52.66 per barrel.

It was a huge turnaround for the oil market, which had slumped Wednesday on news of soaring crude inventorie­s in the United States that indicated weak demand growth.

Thursday’s reported attacks came amid simmering tensions between Tehran and Washington, which pointed the finger at key oil producer Iran over previous tanker attacks in May.

Markets are paying particular­ly close attention after US President Donald Trump abandoned a landmark 2015 nuclear deal with the Islamic republic last year.

“Investors will be keeping a keen eye on the developmen­ts in the Gulf of Oman as tensions in the Middle-east have been rising since President Trump withdrew from the Iran deal,” Sun Global Investment­s chief Mihir Kapadia said in a note.

“Although US National Security Adviser John Bolton has accused Iran of a similar incident before, the country has distanced itself from today’s attacks.

“From this, the biggest concern will be a retaliatio­n which could leave markets looking shaky in the meantime, with Iran potentiall­y being met with more severe sanctions which could really affect its oil output and economy if found guilty,” Kapadia added.

In commodity deals elsewhere, cocoa prices retreated one day after striking an 11-month peak.

The market had soared Wednesday on news that key producers Ivory Coast and Ghana have threatened to stop selling their production to buyers who do not meet a minimum price level.

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