Oil prices fall more than 3% as traders discount Iran-Israel war risk

Environment

Oil prices slipped on Friday on the possibility of a nearing Gaza ceasefire that could ease geopolitical concerns in the Middle East, while a stronger dollar and faltering U.S. gasoline demand also weighed on prices.
Olga Rolenko | Moment | Getty Images

U.S. crude oil fell for the third consecutive trading session on Wednesday, dipping below $85 a barrel as the market dismissed the risk of a wider war between Israel and Iran that could disrupt supplies.

The West Texas Intermediate contract for May delivery fell 46 cents, or 0.55%, to $84.89 a barrel. June Brent futures were down 51 cents, or 0.57%, at $89.51 a barrel. U.S. oil and the global benchmark are down just under 1% this week.

“Oil prices go about their business of unwinding some of the war premium that has been priced-in due to the continuing tensions surrounding the Gaza conflict and the subsequent Iranian missile onslaught on Israel,” John Evans, an analyst at oil broker PVM, wrote in a note Wednesday.

“It is hard to imagine that ‘cooler heads prevail’ can be associated with this eons-long strife, but thus far Israel has adhered to the international calls of showing restraint,” Evans said.

UK Foreign Secretary David Cameron said Wednesday that “it’s clear the Israelis are making a decision to act” against Iran.

“We hope they do so in a way that does as little to escalate this as possible,” Cameron told reporters in Jerusalem before meeting with Israeli officials.

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi warned Wednesday that a counterattack by Israel would be met with a “massive and harsh” response.

Articles You May Like

Tesla surges after Elon Musk says new affordable EV models coming
Hyundai to add hybrids at EV-only plant as rising demand throws a curveball
Toyota preps new large electric SUV, is this the Highlander EV we’ve been waiting for?
BETA hits its latest eVTOL milestone, transitioning mid-air with a pilot onboard [Video]
Biden ‘happy to debate’ Trump – as former president responds