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Home / Business / Companies / Banking and finance

Oil price gives up gains since start of Israel-Hamas war

Financial Times
7 Nov, 2023 09:32 PM3 mins to read

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Saudi Arabia's Minister of Energy Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman greets attendees after speaking at the Future Investment Initiative conference, popularly known as “Davos in the Desert”, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on October 25. Photo / Tamir Kalifa, The New York Times

Saudi Arabia's Minister of Energy Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman greets attendees after speaking at the Future Investment Initiative conference, popularly known as “Davos in the Desert”, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on October 25. Photo / Tamir Kalifa, The New York Times

Oil prices tumbled to the lowest in more than three months on Tuesday, reversing all gains made since Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, with hedge funds betting that the conflict will not draw in oil-rich neighbouring countries.

Brent crude, the international benchmark, settled 4.2 per cent lower at $81.61 a barrel, dropping back to levels last seen in late July and more than wiping out the rally that began in early October. The US benchmark West Texas Intermediate fell 4.3 per cent to $77.37 a barrel.

Hamas’ attacks and Israel’s subsequent declaration of war sparked fears of a wider conflict that could hit the Middle East’s oil and gas supplies, pushing prices up more than 10 per cent to almost $93 a barrel by the middle of last month.

But those fears have largely subsided among traders, who believe there is little imminent danger of the conflict escalating and drawing in countries such as Iran.

“While the death toll in Gaza from Israeli air strikes continues to rise to unimaginable levels, the prospect for the conflict spreading to the oil-rich part of the Middle East is increasingly being put at near-zero,” said Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank.

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Hedge funds are also exiting long positions taken up following the outbreak of the war. In the week to October 31, they sold off the equivalent of more than 70 million barrels of crude oil across Brent and WTI, the two market benchmarks, according to data from the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

Israeli soldiers in Sderot,  one of the areas infiltrated by Hamas on October 7. Dozens of migrant farm workers from Thailand, the largest source of foreign farm labour in Israel, were seized or killed by Hamas fighters during the attack. Photo / Tamir Kalifa, The New York Times
Israeli soldiers in Sderot, one of the areas infiltrated by Hamas on October 7. Dozens of migrant farm workers from Thailand, the largest source of foreign farm labour in Israel, were seized or killed by Hamas fighters during the attack. Photo / Tamir Kalifa, The New York Times

Traders were now “discounting possible escalation” in the Middle East and instead turning their attention to lacklustre economic data coming out of the US, Europe and China, said Helima Croft, head of commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets.

“Many of them got burnt” last year after overestimating the scale of disruption to oil supplies following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, said Croft. “[So] they want to see that risk really materialise before they start pricing that in...I think there are still significant risks, but market participants have decided to move on.”

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Oil prices had already fallen sharply on Friday after a speech by Hassan Nasrallah, leader of the Lebanese militant group Hizbollah, stopped short of calling for an escalation of the conflict. His speech “took the sting out of the war premium”, Hansen said.

After rallying above $100 a barrel last year following Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, oil prices have been under pressure for much of 2023, but have had some support in recent months after Saudi Arabia and Russia led Opec+ in cutting output and exports.

Prices of Brent crude and WTI remain higher than levels recorded before Saudi Arabia made its first voluntary cut to production in July.

Leading oil-producing countries led by Saudi Arabia and Russia have at times wrestled with whether to make cuts in crude supplies to the global economy. Photo / AP
Leading oil-producing countries led by Saudi Arabia and Russia have at times wrestled with whether to make cuts in crude supplies to the global economy. Photo / AP

Saudi Aramco, the kingdom’s state-run company responsible for nearly a tenth of the world’s oil supplies, reported stronger third-quarter profits on Tuesday compared with the previous three-month period, as higher prices more than offset lower sales volumes.

Bjarne Schieldrop, chief commodities analyst at SEB, said markets were watching for further action from Saudi Arabia and Russia should prices fall below $80 a barrel — around the level where both government’s budgets start to strain.

“If it goes below $80 per barrel, I think Saudi Arabia and Russia will intervene to create confidence about the price level and say ‘we’re ready to defend the price’,” he said.

Written by: Stephanie Stacey and Ian Johnston in London

© Financial Times

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