Oil prices extended rally to about 30% on Monday, hitting their highest since July 2022, as the expanding U.S.-Israeli war with Iran led some major Middle East oil producers to cut supplies and on concerns of prolonged disruption to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.
Brent oil futures surged as much as 27.85% to $118.5 a barrel now, while WTI Crude oil futures jumped as much as 29.91% to $118.09 a barrel.
COMMENTARY:
DANIEL HYNES, SENIOR COMMODITY STRATEGIST, ANZ, SYDNEY
"I think prices have rallied this morning on the reports that Middle East producers are now reducing output due to storage facilities filling up fast."
"I certainly think the spectre now of Middle Eastern producers curtailing output is going to keep those prices elevated. The next flag will be whether it eventually reaches a point where they have to start shutting in oil wells, which not only further impacts output but also delays a response once the conflict eases. That would potentially sustain those prices for much longer."
VISHNU VARATHAN, HEAD OF MACRO RESEARCH, ASIA EX-JAPAN, MIZUHO, SINGAPORE
"A sudden supply shock reverberates well beyond just who is a net energy exporter and importer. There are acute supply chain effects beyond how just price eats into margins. Even for a place like Indonesia (where) it is not unusual to see street protests if pump prices go up."
"Asia takes the brunt of the sharp escalation in oil prices and there are few places to run and hide. The dollar has to be the one outperforming, given Japan and Korea's exposures here and the sharp pain that can be expected from Brent at $107."
SAUL KAVONIC, HEAD OF ENERGY RESEARCH AT MST MARQUEE
"The market had been complacent about the scope and duration of the war and associated supply disruptions until last Friday.
"Its a case of the oil market who cried wolf. After three years of geopolitical risk premia rising only to fail to translate to supply disruptions, the market became complacent about the current events.
"But this existential Iran war is the energy crisis scenario that has been wargamed for 50 years, finally coming to fore."
BMI, A UNIT OF FITCH SOLUTIONS
"Our baseline scenario is the conflict in Iran will be large but short-lived, though there is a clear risk of a prolonged war. Among emerging markets, the economic impact will be felt most clearly in the Gulf Cooperation Council, reflecting the shock's adverse impact on trade, logistics, tourism and investment."
"First, Pakistan and India are most vulnerable as they are energy importers with relatively high exposure to the Strait of Hormuz. Second, outside of physical trade disruption, Egypt and Turkiye are most exposed. This is due to their high energy import bill, fragile external positions, large energy subsidies and unanchored inflation. Third, commodity producing economies in Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America are least at risk, including Nigeria, Ghana and Peru."
MICHAEL MCCARTHY, CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER, MOOMOO, SYDNEY
"The threats to attack refineries are very concerning. Because it threatens the worst of all economic worlds. Cutting off 15%-20% of the world's oil supply not only slows down every economy globally, but it introduces an inflation impulse. And inflation plus slowing growth is stagflation, and that's an economic disaster."
