Crude oil prices rose after Israel bombed Iranian oil depots


April WTI crude oil (CLJ26) closed at +3.87 (+4.26%) on Monday, and April RBOB gasoline (RBJ26) +0.0618 (+2.25%). April WTI crude fell to a 3.75-year near-term high of $119.48 on Monday but then retreated to $94.77.

Crude oil and gasoline prices rose on Monday after Israel bombed 30 Iranian oil depots on Saturday. In addition, Saudi Arabia has become the latest Middle Eastern oil producer to curb production as local oil storage facilities near capacity.

Oil prices pulled back from sharp gains after a meeting of G7 finance ministers said they were ready to coordinate the release of strategic oil supplies, but that the release was not yet necessary. “We are ready to take the necessary measures, including supporting the world’s energy supply such as the release of reserves,” it said in a statement.

Meanwhile, there is no end in sight to the Middle East conflict as Iran’s Council of Experts over the weekend elected hardliner Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as Iran’s new supreme leader. Iran’s new leader has close ties to Iran’s powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). President Trump has said he is “not happy” with Iran’s new leader.

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz halted most energy shipments from the Persian Gulf and boosted energy prices. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has warned ships to avoid the crossing, saying ships “may be at risk from missiles and drones.” The closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which handles a fifth of the world’s oil, has forced Gulf producers to export their oil to store crude in storage tanks. Goldman Sachs estimates the real-time risk premium for crude oil at $18/bbl, assuming the impact of a six-week total shutdown on oil traffic in the Strait of Hormuz.

As an emergency factor for crude oil, OPEC+ said on March 1 that it would increase crude oil production by 206,000 bpd in April, above an estimate of 137,000 bpd, although an increase in output now appears unlikely as Middle Eastern producers are forced to cut production due to the Middle East conflict. OPEC+ is trying to restore all production of the 2.2 million bpd it committed to by early 2024, but still has about 1.0 million bpd left to restore. OPEC’s January crude output fell -230,000 bpd to a 5-month low of 28.83 million bpd.

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